⚖️ A.I. AL · Analytical Logic
The forensic mind that refuses to name the wrong person.
Most true crime asks whodunit? Our method asks a harder question first — how sure are we allowed to be? A.I. AL is a transparent, step-by-step way of reasoning about a case. Not a black box. Not a magic eight-ball. And it runs on one rule it will not break.
Never name the wrong person.
A false accusation creates a brand-new victim and frees the real offender to do it again. So A.I. AL would rather say "we don't know yet" than hand you a satisfying guess. That restraint is the whole reason you can trust it.
🧩 How it thinks
The offender is an overlap.
Every clue draws a circle. Some tell you who the offender is — "male," "small enough to fit the window," "knew the family's routine." Others tell you who they're not — "the DNA excludes these people." The offender lives in the overlap: inside everything we can prove, outside everything we can rule out.
Ruling people out is as powerful as ruling them in. A single small window clears thousands of people at once, by geometry — protection built from evidence. And you only get a name when hard, independent evidence collapses the overlap to one person. Until then, you have a description, not a suspect — and A.I. AL never pretends a description is a name.
🧪 Watch it work — three real cases
Converge. Refuse. Withhold.
The method does one of three things, depending on what the evidence earns. All three are real.
The Idaho Student Murders
DNA on a knife sheath, a suspect's car on surveillance, and his phone's pattern around the house — three independent directions that couldn't all be wrong together. The overlap collapsed to one person, and that's where the case landed.
The Central Park Five
Five teenagers, convicted almost entirely on confessions — but all five came from the same coercive interrogation. Not five clues. One event wearing five coats. The independent evidence, the DNA, excluded them all. A.I. AL refuses the conviction the real system made.
JonBenét Ramsey
Thirty years of public suspicion, and still no honest name. So it names no one, notes the family was cleared by DNA, and points instead at the one real lead. 'Not yet — but here's the thread worth pulling' is the system working, not failing.
It speaks when the evidence earns it — and stays silent when it doesn't.
- Explain how cases actually get solved.
- Audit convictions for the fingerprints of wrongful conviction.
- Find the missing and the overlooked.
- Protect — turn what the patterns teach into staying safe.
- Not law enforcement — it works only from public information.
- It never implies investigators used our methods.
- It hands genuine leads to the authorities who can act.
- It will never name a living, un-convicted person — and holds the deceased to the same bar.
A.I. AL is, in the end, a forensic mind that's proudest of who it refuses to accuse.
See the method up close — how the missing are found, how a crime scene is read, the quiet logic of weighing evidence.