For attorneys

Your client arrived organized.

Clients who use Evidence Companion come to your office with a structured case record — not a shoebox. Here's what that looks like.

What a case record contains.

Incident log

Each incident documented with date, time, location, severity, contact method, witness information, and victim impact. Numbered and labeled sequentially.

Evidence files with annotations

Files attached to specific incidents — or as background/case-level records. Each file includes the survivor's label (what it is) and their longer annotations (what it means, what to notice). Email metadata captured where relevant.

Companion testimony — raw and reviewed

Raw transcript from guided sessions, preserved unaltered. A survivor-reviewed summary, clearly labeled and timestamped, kept separately. If no review has occurred, the AI-generated draft is shown and labeled as such. You will always know which is which.

Prior records and background files

Court documents, police reports, official records from other jurisdictions, background research — kept separate from incident-specific evidence in a distinct background section.

Your review layer

You can apply review labels — relevance, privilege, issue flags, and notes — directly in the portal. These are visible to you and not shown to the survivor.

How access works.

Your client generates a secure, read-only access link from their account and shares it with you. No account creation required on your end. You open the link, review the record, and apply your own notes.

Access is time-limited and revocable. Your client can see when you accessed the record and how many times. They remain in control of the link at all times.

Export formats: structured ZIP archive or formatted DA Package PDF. Both use consistent folder structure and file labeling.

Attorney supervision and privilege.

Evidence Companion operates under attorney direction. This structure is designed so that AI-processed testimony may be eligible for privilege protection under applicable frameworks.

The platform does not constitute legal advice, does not create an attorney-client relationship between any user and this platform, and does not make representations about evidentiary admissibility. Those determinations remain yours.

Questions or partnership inquiries?

We welcome inquiry from attorneys, law firms, and victim services legal teams.

Contact us