Frequently Asked Questions

Below are answers to the most common questions about our reports, intake process, and service options. If your question is not covered here, you can submit the intake form and we will review the materials directly.

  1. What does PublicCaseReview.com do?

We turn case materials, public records, transcripts, filings, and related documents into structured reports that explain the facts, disputes, missing pieces, and civic questions in plain language.

  1. Is this legal advice?

No. We do not provide legal advice, legal strategy, legal representation, or court filings. If you need legal advice, you should speak with a licensed attorney.

  1. Do you do private investigations?

No. We do not do surveillance, hidden-data gathering, skip tracing, or other private investigation work. We work only from materials you lawfully provide and publicly available records.

  1. What kinds of cases do you review?

We review criminal cases, arrest issues, police conduct matters, search-and-seizure issues, public-records disputes, family advocacy cases, and media or public-awareness matters.

  1. What materials can I submit?

You can submit dockets, charging documents, police reports, bodycam or dashcam footage, transcripts, hearing recordings, emails, letters, screenshots, photos, texts, news articles, and other public records.

  1. What if I do not have all the records yet?

That is fine. We can still review what you have, identify gaps, and tell you what material would be most useful to obtain next.

  1. How do the service tiers work?

Bronze is a concise summary, Silver adds deeper analysis and a timeline, and Gold adds visuals, outreach materials, and one revision round.

  1. Can you help with public-facing materials?

Yes. Depending on the package, we can prepare civic-action language, briefing sheets, quote cards, social captions, petition language, or a visual case board.

  1. Will my report say whether someone is guilty or innocent?

No. We do not make final legal judgments. We organize the record, highlight what is documented, identify disputes, and present questions or advocacy points where appropriate.

  1. Are your reports neutral?

Not always. Some reports are informational and balanced, while others are written from a public-interest or advocacy perspective depending on the client’s goal. We always try to distinguish documented facts from allegations and interpretation.

  1. How long does a report take?

Timing depends on the package, the amount of source material, and whether a rush option is needed. Small projects can move quickly, while large record sets may require more time.

  1. How do I get started?

Fill out the intake form, upload the materials you want reviewed, and choose the package that best fits your needs. If we need more information before starting, we’ll contact you.