On a criminal file, the clock is rarely on your side. Discovery lands in a dump — police reports, charging documents, body-cam transcripts, 911 audio logs, lab results — and someone has to read all of it before anyone can build a defense. Parker does that reading, organizes it into a timeline, and produces first-draft motions and summaries, then surfaces what an attorney actually needs to decide.

The important part: you don't upload anything. Parker already has the discovery and case files across the systems your firm uses. You name the case and ask — the way you'd ask an associate.

Five things to hand Parker first

And a sixth that firms lean on constantly: ad hoc case questions. Parker answers quick questions from across the file so attorneys don't have to dig through the discovery.

Real prompts to try

These are phrased the way you'd actually ask an associate. Parker already has the discovery — just ask.

"Summarize the discovery in State v. Daniels."
Parker reads the reports, charging docs, and transcripts and returns a tight summary of the charges, the alleged facts, and what the State is relying on.
"Draft a motion to suppress the traffic stop in Daniels."
Parker pulls the facts of the stop from the record, applies the standard, and hands back an editable motion in your firm's format — citing the reports it drew from.
"Build a timeline of the night of the arrest in Daniels."
Parker returns a date- and time-ordered timeline — the stop, the search, the statements, the booking — that you can drop straight into a brief.
"Are there inconsistencies between the officer's report and the body-cam transcript in Daniels?"
Parker compares the two, flags every discrepancy, and answers in the chat with the timestamps and page references involved.
"Draft a sentencing mitigation memo for Daniels."
Parker assembles the client's background and the mitigating circumstances from the file into your template and returns an editable draft.

A typical matter, start to finish

A felony case, illustrating how Parker moves a file from discovery to a filed motion:

01 · REVIEW
Read
Parker reads the discovery and builds the timeline of events.
02 · ANALYZE
Flag
It flags suppression issues and inconsistencies in the record.
03 · DRAFT
Draft
It drafts the motion to suppress and any mitigation memo.
04 · ANSWER
Field
It fields ad hoc questions so the attorney can move fast.

Getting the best results: Just name the case and ask — Parker already has the discovery and will tell you what's missing. Verify every motion, timeline, and citation against the source record before it's filed or leaves the firm.