Reduce avoidable filing confusion, queue ambiguity, correction loops, and packet-readiness friction.
Open path →A forwardable memo for a pilot sponsor.
A one-page sponsor memo that summarizes the public-service problem, the proposed controlled pilot, what the static package proves, what production still requires, and the next meeting decision.
Public walkthrough uses fictional records; production requires court-approved adapters and configured runtime controls.
Open path →Clerks get dispatch clarity; judges get decision-ready packets; leadership gets aggregate system-health metrics.
Open path →Name a sponsor, State IT owner, operations owner, and 30-day evaluation checkpoint.
Open path →Sponsor memo board
The sponsor memo is written to be forwarded after a call. It keeps enthusiasm tied to controlled scope, measurable outcomes, and production requirements.
| Memo section | Message | Proof route |
|---|---|---|
| Problem | Avoidable process friction creates delay and confusion. | /demo/public-confidence-story/ |
| Pilot | Evaluate queue-first workflows before production connection. | /pilot/scope/ |
| Controls | Human review, audit, adapters, and no-mutation boundaries stay visible. | /demo/data-governance-packet/ |
| Ask | Name owners and authorize a readiness checkpoint. | /demo/pilot-board-readout/ |
- state sponsor memo visible
- forwardable memo posture
- decision ask named
- production caveat visible
- human review repeated
The public package has a clear next step.
Human review remains the control point. This route is a public training record with fictional records and is not connected to a live court system.
- 1Audience path
Plan selection
- 2Public proof route
Account workspace
- 3Review standard
Settings and connections
- 4Forwardable next step
Review-safe outputs
This public walkthrough uses fictional training records. It does not submit filings, change court records, provide legal advice, or connect to a live court system. Production use requires authenticated access, configured adapters, audit logging, and court-approved integration boundaries.
