LawSensai Case Intelligence is a feature that reviews the facts you describe about a legal situation and organizes them into a clear starting picture: the legal issues that may be involved, the considerations that tend to matter, the documents worth gathering, and sensible next steps. It is an informational tool. It does not predict how a case will turn out, and it does not guarantee any result. Its purpose is to help you understand the shape of your situation and prepare, and a licensed attorney is available to review your matter.
This post explains what Case Intelligence does, how it works with the information you provide, what a typical summary includes, what it deliberately does not do, and where attorney review fits in. It also covers how to get the most out of the tool and when it makes sense to bring a licensed attorney into your matter.
What is LawSensai Case Intelligence?
Case Intelligence is an informational tool that turns a plain-language description of your situation into an organized overview of the likely legal issues, the considerations that commonly apply, the documents to gather, and reasonable next steps. You describe what happened in your own words, and it returns a structured summary you can read, save, and bring to a professional.
It is meant to reduce the confusion that comes at the very start of a legal problem, when it is hard to know what kind of issue you even have or what to do first. It helps you see the relevant categories, questions, and paperwork so you can prepare and make informed decisions.
Two points define the tool. First, every output carries a visible AI disclosure, so you always know the summary was generated with the help of AI. Second, the analysis is general information, not legal advice, and it is not a substitute for a licensed attorney's judgment about your specific facts.
How does Case Intelligence analyze the facts you provide?
It reads the facts you enter, identifies the legal categories those facts appear to touch, and maps them to the questions and documents that usually matter for that kind of matter. The analysis is built entirely on what you share, so more complete and accurate facts produce a more useful summary.
In practice, it looks at a few things at once:
- The type of matter. It considers whether your facts point toward, for example, a landlord and tenant dispute, an employment question, a contract disagreement, a family matter, or a consumer issue.
- Key facts and dates. It picks out events, deadlines, and amounts, since timing and numbers often drive legal analysis.
- Missing information. It flags gaps where an important fact or document is not yet known, so you can fill them in before making decisions.
Because it works only from what you tell it, it cannot independently verify your account, and it does not have access to records or context you have not shared. Treat the summary as a well-organized starting point, not a finished investigation.
What does a Case Intelligence summary include?
A typical summary highlights the legal issues your facts may raise, the considerations that commonly affect those issues, a checklist of documents to gather, and a short list of practical next steps. It is written in plain language and phrased in terms of what may apply, not what is certain.
You can expect sections along these lines:
- Likely legal issues. The areas of law your situation appears to touch, described in general terms.
- Relevant considerations. Factors such as timing, notice requirements, deadlines, and available evidence that often shape how a matter proceeds.
- Documents to gather. The records most likely to matter, such as written agreements, letters and emails, text messages, photos, receipts, financial records, and any official notices, along with why each one helps.
- Sensible next steps. Reasonable actions to consider, which frequently include speaking with a licensed attorney before taking a step that has legal consequences.
The documents checklist deserves special attention. Gathering the right paperwork early, keeping originals, and organizing events into a simple timeline can make any later conversation with a lawyer faster and more productive. What counts as the right paperwork depends on your matter and your state, so use the checklist as a guide rather than a fixed list.
Is Case Intelligence a prediction of how your case will turn out?
No. Case Intelligence does not predict outcomes, estimate the odds of winning, or guarantee any result. It organizes and informs. It does not decide.
Legal outcomes depend on facts that are specific to each situation, on the law of the state or jurisdiction involved, on the evidence that can actually be proven, on court procedures and deadlines, and on the decisions of the other side and, in some cases, a judge or jury. Two situations that look similar on the surface can end very differently once these details come into play. For that reason, any tool that claimed to forecast your result would be overstating what it can honestly know.
Rules also vary widely from state to state. Deadlines to act, often called statutes of limitations, notice requirements, filing procedures, and available remedies differ by jurisdiction and by the type of claim. Case Intelligence points you toward the considerations that commonly matter, but confirming how they apply to you is work for a licensed attorney.
Where does attorney review fit in?
A licensed attorney is available to review your matter, and consequential or safety-critical work is meant to be checked by a person rather than left to automation alone. The consistent framing across LawSensai is straightforward: the AI drafts and assists, and a licensed attorney reviews the work that carries real stakes.
This matters most when a decision cannot be easily undone. Signing or responding to a legal document, replying to a lawsuit, meeting a court deadline, or committing to a settlement are all moments where professional review is worthwhile. Case Intelligence can help you understand the issues and organize your documents, and an attorney can then apply judgment to your specific facts and jurisdiction.
Consider reaching out to an attorney sooner rather than later if any of the following apply:
- You have been served with legal papers or have a court date.
- A deadline is approaching and you are unsure how it applies to you.
- The amount at stake is significant or the situation could affect your housing, employment, finances, or family.
- The other side has a lawyer and you do not.
How to get the most from Case Intelligence
Start by describing your situation as fully and accurately as you can, because the summary can only be as good as the facts behind it. A few habits help:
- Include the details that anchor a legal analysis. Give the key dates, dollar amounts, names of the parties, and the sequence of what happened.
- Gather the documents it flags. Collect the records on the checklist, keep the originals, and store copies together.
- Build a simple timeline. A short, dated list of events is easier for a professional to work with than a long narrative.
- Note any deadlines. If you see a date to respond or act, treat it as urgent and confirm it with an attorney.
- Bring the summary to a professional. Use the output to make your conversation with a licensed attorney focused and efficient.
Used this way, Case Intelligence is a preparation tool. It helps you walk into a decision or a consultation informed and organized, rather than guessing about what your situation involves.
One closing note. This feature and this article provide general information, not legal advice, and the law varies by state and by the specifics of each matter. For guidance you can rely on, confirm your situation with a licensed attorney in your state.


