Ask About Investigations
Ask About Investigations is an LPIIA public tool designed to accept limited inputs and return approved-content answer, related pages, and CTA. It is an educational or routing aid, not a legal conclusion, case acceptance, or guaranteed investigative result.
Use this page to understand what Ask About Investigations is intended to organize, what its output can and cannot establish, and when a full investigator review is still required.
What the Tool Does
Ask About Investigations is categorized as Assistant. It is designed to turn question into approved-content answer, related pages, and CTA. The tool should give a direct result and explain what the result means.
Who It Is For
The tool is intended for visitors, attorneys, businesses, or investigators who need a practical first step before a full assignment. It can help organize information, identify a source, estimate a planning factor, or route a request. It does not automatically accept a matter.
What the Result Can and Cannot Establish
The result may establish general educational guidance. It cannot establish legal advice, and case acceptance. The page should state these limits beside the output rather than hiding them in a footer.
Privacy, Legal, and Technical Notes
Privacy guidance: Questions may be logged. Legal guidance: Answers only from approved public content. The interface should be mobile friendly, accessible, and usable without audio.
Related Investigation and Next Step
If the tool identifies a valid investigative need, the visitor can submit the objective, known facts, jurisdiction, deadline, and requested deliverable. LPIIA then reviews lawful purpose, fit, scope, conflicts, and source availability before accepting work.
Common Questions
What information does the tool use?
question
What does it return?
approved-content answer, related pages, and CTA
Does it accept my case?
No. A tool result does not create an investigator-client relationship or confirm matter acceptance.
Is the result legal advice?
No. The tool is educational or operational and should be reviewed with counsel when legal rights or strategy are involved.
Related Investigation Resources
Discuss the Assignment
Provide the objective, jurisdiction, deadline, known facts, and required deliverable.