Information can be organized for review, but packet staging stays blocked until a person confirms the filing information.
Control map
Each safeguard answers a practical review concern.
The point is not to make a broad technology claim. The point is to show what remains visible, editable, reviewable, and measurable as a filing moves from public intake to clerk work and court review.
Reviewed fields remain correctable. A material edit returns the packet to review-required status.
Deficiencies are visible as work states with reasons, returned-packet status, corrected-packet review, and closure discipline.
Public filers, clerks, judges, and leadership see different work surfaces matched to their operational role.
Protected and sealed record handling is represented as restricted workflow, not public content.
Public review focuses on queue age, correction loops, service/proof gaps, slotting strain, and packet readiness.
What the walkthrough should make clear
Operational control stays visible.
- Documents are received, organized, and reviewed before movement.
- Missing items are surfaced before they become silent backlog.
- Service and proof status can be tracked before court review.
- Scheduling can account for packet readiness instead of treating the calendar as separate.
- Leadership sees aggregate work pressure without exposing protected details.
Public claim limits
Keep the story careful and court-safe.
- No outcome prediction or decision automation claim.
- No claim that software alone resolves staffing, policy, or court-rule constraints.
- No publication of case-level, sealed, or personally identifying details.
- No court submission posture without human review and local configuration.
- No vendor attack, replacement claim, or shortcut around court authority.
Safeguards matrix
How a reviewer can test the controls during the public walkthrough.
| Question | Where to look | What should be visible |
|---|---|---|
| Can a packet move without review? | Public filing review and staging | Review confirmation is required before staging. |
| Can missing items disappear? | Clerk deficiencies and packet routes | Deficiency reason, correction status, and closure path remain visible. |
| Can scheduling ignore readiness? | Scheduling board and packet views | Scheduled-not-ready and service/proof gaps remain surfaced. |
| Can public reporting expose private records? | Operational metrics and capacity model | Only aggregate fictional measures are shown in public review. |
| Can leadership see what is stuck? | Court leadership and metrics routes | Queue aging, overload, correction patterns, and supervisor attention signals are visible. |
