Verify Legal Claims Before They Leave Your Desk

Legal writing requires precision. Use this page to reduce risk by checking legal details, citations, and case descriptions.

Where hallucinations can cause legal exposure

In legal contexts, even small inaccuracies can create real issues. Prioritize verification for:

  • Case details: names, dates, holdings, and jurisdiction.
  • Statutes and citations: sections, amendments, and wording.
  • Procedural statements: deadlines, burdens, and required steps.
  • Confident conclusions: claims that sound final without evidence.

This page is not legal advice. Use professional review for legal decisions.

Cases
Verify identifiers
Citations
Check wording
Claims
Require support

Verification workflow for legal drafts

Confirm citations one by one

Check that each cited authority matches the sentence it supports.

Check time-sensitive facts

Deadlines and procedural timelines should be verified carefully.

Use a risk triage pass

Let a quick signal guide what to verify first before human review.

Check Legal Draft Text

FAQ

Is this for attorneys only?

Anyone working on legal content can use it as a pre-check step, but professional review is still required.

What should I verify first?

Citations, case details, deadlines, and any procedural claims.

Does a low risk score mean it’s correct?

No. It only suggests lower verification urgency. You should still verify key legal details.

Is it legal advice?

No. It provides risk triage guidance, not legal counsel.

Get in Touch