UK's fraud watchdog unleashes AI on cases

The system is billed as an accuracy-raising and cost-cutting 'robo-lawyer'

UK's fraud watchdog unleashes AI on cases

The UK’s Serious Fraud Office has let loose a “robo-lawyer” on the matters the authority is handling.

In the latest move by the office to use technology to enhance its operations, it has begun to use artificial intelligence across all of its new casework from this month. The system is augmented by “Axcelerate,” an AI-powered automated document review technology developed by OpenText.

This allows the SFO to investigate more quickly than when human lawyers work on the cases alone, and reduce costs and errors.

Most Read

The launch comes just over a year after the SFO ramped up use of AI. Late last year, the office’s director said that he expects AI will soon replace lawyers in the preparation for criminal cases.

The SFO piloted the use of a “robo-lawyer,” which achieved speeds 2,000 times faster than a human lawyer, on its Rolls-Royce case. The latest system to be launched by the office can process more than half a million documents a day. The system will recognise patterns, group information by subject, organise timelines, and remove duplicates, the SFO said. It will also soon be able to remove unrelated documents.

“AI technology will help us to work smarter, faster and more effectively investigate and prosecute economic crime,” said Ben Denison, the SFO’s chief technology officer. “Using innovative technology like this is no longer optional – it is essential given the volume of material we are dealing with and will help ensure we can continue to meet our disclosure obligations and deliver justice sooner, at significantly lower cost. The amount of data handled by our digital forensics team has quadrupled in the last year, and that trend is continuing upwards as company data grows ever larger.”

 

Related stories:
UK SFO ramping up use of AI
Meet your lawyer, HAL 9000
 

Recent articles & video

Thomson Geer confirms role in Bruce Lehrmann defamation suit

New partners join PCL Lawyers in Sydney

Need for DV assistance ticking up, Legal Aid NSW says

Top young stars of Australia's legal profession for 2024 unveiled

Wave of law firm mergers sweeps across the UK despite declining firm numbers

US Justice Department flags Kirkland & Ellis' potential conflict of interest in a bankruptcy case

Most Read Articles

Top young stars of Australia's legal profession for 2024 unveiled

Promotions round beefs up Clyde & Co's Australia partnership

Allens welcomes five new partners

Tech and IP stars join up with Allen & Overy