Blueline AI helps officers draft reports, identify charges and think through evidence — all grounded in the legislation that actually applies to their jurisdiction. Built out of frustration with the problem. Available free to any officer today.
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. The engine is being open sourced so developers and organisations can build on it freely. 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.
Three working tools, built to solve a real problem that gets ignored. Free to use, no account needed, no data stored.
This started as a personal frustration. Too many hours lost to paperwork that could be better spent. The tools exist because the problem was impossible to ignore.
Spent years on the front line watching administrative burden eat into time that should be spent on the job. Knows what a report needs to say to survive CPS scrutiny or stand up in a sheriff court — and built these tools because no good solution existed.
Operational Law Enforcement BackgroundDoctorate in unmanned systems and machine learning covering edge inference, computer vision and autonomous decision-making. Responsible for the AI architecture and the structured legislation engine that grounds every output in verified statute rather than hallucinated law.
PhD · Machine Learning ResearchWhether you are an officer who found the tools useful, a policing organisation who wants to discuss them, or you just want to talk about what we are building — we would love to hear from you.