Prosecutor identity resolution
Separate prosecutor-name extraction from verified identity before any appearance count or pattern table is shown to counsel.
Before you sit down to negotiate a plea with an AUSA you've never faced, see their charge-level disposition pattern from public records — what they tend to plead down, what they take to trial — their motion record, and which judges they're consistently paired with on cases like yours. Identity confidence and sample size are shown on every row, so you know whether you're looking at 40 cases or 6, and a thin record is labeled, not dressed up as a pattern.
“appropriate considerations to be weighed”
Source-backed preview
Separate prosecutor-name extraction from verified identity before any appearance count or pattern table is shown to counsel.
Show only sourced public-opinion appearances for a named prosecutor, scoped by jurisdiction and charge family, with thin matches labeled as gaps.
Convert matched public-opinion motion rows into count-only attorney diligence tables, suppressing percentages when sample size is too thin.
Frame charge-category and disposition observations as source-backed public-record context, not as a charging forecast or case-specific recommendation.
Attach the case-level source URLs behind every appearance and motion row so counsel can inspect the underlying opinion or docket source.
Flag judge/prosecutor pairing counts as preliminary diligence only until the matched case list and identity confidence are reviewed.
List missing prosecutor-profile sources, unsupported office-level claims, and records that require public-record or paid-docket acquisition before publication.
Add national and state-court office context around staffing, workload, and office structure without turning aggregate BJS rows into a claim about a specific prosecutor.
What you receive has already passed reviewer sign-off on source URLs, identity confidence, sample sizes, and gap labels for your jurisdiction.
Prosecutor Pattern Preview launches once we're confident the prosecutor's public record is complete enough to rely on — not just present. Join the waitlist and we'll tell you when your jurisdiction is covered.
Pattern data is derived from public court records and represents observed docket-level patterns only. Coverage is not comprehensive. No inference about character, fitness, or professional conduct is intended or should be drawn.