Blueline AI turns an officer's raw notes into a court-ready, legally accurate incident report in under two minutes. Every draft is grounded in verified legislation specific to the officer's jurisdiction, from Scotland to California.
The officer selects their jurisdiction, enters brief notes about what happened, and receives a structured report draft with the correct legal language and statute references for that specific region.
Choose country, state or region, and optionally the specific force or agency. The platform loads the correct legal framework, from Scottish criminal procedure to California Penal Code.
Write brief factual notes in plain language. What happened, who was involved, what was observed, what was said. No formatting required. The AI handles structure.
Receive a full structured draft with correct headings, legal language, and verified statute references. Review, edit as needed, and download or copy for submission.
The core of Blueline AI is its legislation engine. Unlike generic AI tools that guess at legal language, our system references only primary legislation from official government and legal sources. Every statute cited in a generated report comes from a verified, jurisdiction-specific source.
This matters because a report that cites the wrong Act, or applies English law to a Scottish case, is worse than useless. It can undermine a prosecution. Our engine applies the correct legal framework based on where the officer works.
Blueline AI focuses on the two highest-value AI applications in law enforcement documentation: automated report writing and legally grounded charge identification.
The officer's notes go in, a court-ready incident narrative comes out. The report uses the correct legal language, structure and statute references for the officer's specific jurisdiction, from a New York arrest report to a Scottish domestic violence narrative using Procurator Fiscal terminology.
The officer describes what happened in plain language. The Charge Identifier returns the most likely offence categories, the specific statutes that apply, the elements that need to be proved, and practical charging considerations, all grounded in the legislation for the officer's state or region.
Our free tools are live and generating real officer usage. This is how we build trust with forces before approaching procurement.
The GovTech AI market is growing fast, but the existing tools are built by American companies for American procurement processes. UK and European forces face a different legal landscape and, increasingly, a data sovereignty requirement that US-hosted platforms cannot meet.
A former serving officer who knows what bad report writing costs, paired with a PhD in machine learning who knows how to build the solution.
Spent years on the front line experiencing firsthand how administrative burden reduces officer effectiveness. Brings product management experience from prior deep-tech roles. Understands exactly what a report needs to say to survive CPS scrutiny or stand up in a sheriff court.
Operational Law Enforcement BackgroundDoctorate in unmanned systems and machine learning, with research spanning edge inference, computer vision, and autonomous decision-making. Architects the AI stack and the legislation engine that ensures every report references verified statute rather than hallucinated law.
PhD · Machine Learning ResearchWe are raising a pre-seed round to bring our report writing platform to its first paying customers in UK law enforcement. This round funds twelve months of focused product development and the pilot agency partnerships that convert free-tool users into contracted customers.
We have deliberately narrowed our scope to report writing and charge identification only. No hardware. No facial recognition. No drones. One problem, solved properly, for a paying market we already understand.
Whether you are an investor running a process, a force commander curious about a pilot, or a potential advisor with government procurement experience, we want to hear from you directly.