Capability
Reports and court exhibits
Findings only matter if someone can act on them. SleuthX assembles an investigation into a clear narrative report and numbered exhibits built to be filed.
The problem: findings that can't be used
An investigation that ends in a pile of screenshots and notes helps no one. To support a protective order, a claim, or a filing, the findings have to be assembled into a coherent account — sourced, preserved, and presented in a form a court or counsel will accept.
Doing that well is a distinct skill, and it's where many otherwise-good investigations fall apart.
What it does
SleuthX turns the work in a project into a narrative report that explains, in plain language, what was found and how — and into numbered exhibits that tie each conclusion back to the preserved evidence behind it.
Because every exhibit links to a vault item with a recorded chain of custody, the report doesn't just assert a finding; it shows the evidence and where it came from, ready to be authenticated.
- A plain-language narrative of what was found and how
- Numbered exhibits tied to preserved evidence
- Each exhibit traceable to its chain of custody
- Output an attorney or insurer can actually file
Reviewed before it goes out
A report carries weight, so a human analyst reviews it before it's final — checking that each conclusion is supported and that the document is clear about what it does and doesn't establish.
For litigation, our analysts can provide expert reports and testimony, and coordinate any regulated investigative work with the licensed Florida private investigators in our network.
More capabilities
AI forensic triage
An evidence-grade first read in minutes — then analyst-reviewed.
Link analysis
Connect the identifiers in a case and pivot between them.
Evidence vault
Hash on ingest. A documented chain of custody, end to end.
Protections
Keep watch after the case is closed — exposure and threats, monitored.















