Pleadly maintains this inventory as a stable artifact regardless of which regulation activates first. ABA Formal Opinion 512 is in force today; California COPRAC amendments to Rules 1.1, 1.4, 1.6, 3.3, 5.1, 5.3 are pending Board vote in May 2026; the Colorado AI Act and EU AI Act are pending or under court-ordered delay. The contents below are stable across those outcomes.
Last reviewed: 2026-05-01
Pleadly’s analysis stack runs across three locally-hosted large-language-model endpoints, each scoped to a distinct purpose. None of these models call out to a third-party AI vendor; inference happens on Pleadly-controlled infrastructure and customer data does not leave Pleadly’s network for model inference.
| Endpoint | Purpose | Residency |
|---|---|---|
| reasoning | Multi-step legal reasoning, demand structure, citation grounding | Pleadly-hosted |
| deepthinking | Long-form analysis (cross-document reconciliation, contradiction scanning) | Pleadly-hosted |
| fast | High-throughput classification (document type, severity tiers) | Pleadly-hosted |
Vector retrieval for verdict-comp similarity matching uses Qdrant against a curated set of approximately 300 California verdicts. Embeddings are derived from case features and verdict descriptions; plaintiff PII is not embedded.
Pleadly’s AI assists with but does not decide any of the following. Final responsibility rests with the licensed attorney via the controls described in section 4.
Pleadly does not score plaintiffs against protected-class attributes and does not derive consequential decisions from race, sex, national origin, age, disability, or other protected characteristics. Demand-amount suggestions anchor on injury type, treatment cost, and California verdict comparables filtered for case similarity — protected-class data is not an input.
Pleadly logs every AI contribution to an immutable audit log, requires attorney review before any work product ships, provides citation traceability for human review, and periodically reviews aggregate output patterns for unexpected correlation with plaintiff demographics. Material findings trigger the notification protocol in section 6.
Pleadly’s compliance posture is schema-level, not policy-level. The controls below are enforced by the database, not by business logic that could be bypassed.
A firm may at any time export their data, delete their data, or request a written explanation of any AI decision. Audit log entries identify which AI surface produced any flagged output and survive account deletion in metadata-only form for accountability.
Pleadly will notify affected firms within 72 hours of identifying any material AI failure — defined as a hallucinated factual claim shipping to a defendant, a cross-tenant isolation breach, a consequential-decision input materially differing from its source document, or an algorithmic-discrimination finding. A public incident summary follows within 7 days.
ABA Op 512 alignment · Security overview · BAA template
Internal source-of-truth: docs/compliance/ai-risk-inventory.md. This page is reviewed quarterly.