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Successful litigators often talk about the importance of grounding their case strategies in objective data and then relying on their experience to make nuanced judgments as they go about the litigation of the matter. In recent years, the use of litigation analytics has become a powerful tool in the hands of these lawyers.
A 2024 LexisNexis survey revealed that 100% of legal professionals who use legal analytics found them to be valuable — and even 83% of non-users found them to be valuable for the data-driven insights they deliver.
The fact is that these analytics are created from whatever data sets are available, so litigators need to be confident that the insights on which they are relying have been informed by the most accurate and comprehensive data from the courts. This includes civil cases filed in federal district courts.
Federal district courts handle a diverse range of civil cases, from complex commercial disputes to high-stakes intellectual property litigation. There are 94 U.S. district courts where a collective total of more than 300,000 civil case filings were made last year.
Access to this data provides a wealth of valuable information from which to create litigation analytics, such as the following:
These insights can provide litigators with that objective data on which they can ground their approach to a case.
Litigation teams that have access to analytics regarding trends and outcomes of civil cases in federal district court gain a significant competitive edge that improves their chances of success. Here are four specific use cases:
Comprehensive federal court data helps civil litigators to identify potential legal arguments and defenses, assess the likelihood of your success in different jurisdictions, and develop targeted discovery strategies for the specific matter at hand.
Accurately assess the value of a case filed in federal district court, identify potential risks and liabilities, and make informed decisions about any settlement offers you receive or wish to make.
Prioritize federal civil cases based on their potential value and complexity, then allocate resources effectively to maximize efficiency of your team’s efforts.
Provide your clients with data-driven insights into their cases, demonstrate a commitment to excellence and showcase your firm’s innovation by leveraging the power of leading-edge analytics tools that include data from federal district courts.
Access to analytics empowers litigators to make more informed decisions, reduce risk, enhance persuasion and ultimately achieve better outcomes for their clients. By embracing data-driven strategies, litigators can stay ahead of the curve in an increasingly competitive legal landscape.
But these tools are only as useful as their level of accuracy and comprehensiveness. When a legal practitioner consults litigation analytics to craft strategy or advise their client, they need to be confident that the underlying data set used for the creation of the analytics is drawing on the best content available.
Lex Machina, a LexisNexis company, recently released a milestone expansion of its award-winning legal analytics, which now cover civil litigation filed in federal district courts.
With Lex Machina - Full Federal, every commercially relevant civil case filed in federal district court is reviewed to extract high-value findings, remedies and damages where available. This additional set of analytics comprises the final 15% of civil federal data, consisting of approximately 500,000 cases.
Lex Machina now provides outcome-driven analytics — including damages and case resolutions — for more than 3.7 million federal district court civil cases, derived from more than 17.5 million filed documents. The new comprehensive federal district court data set can be further subdivided into 22 practice areas, each of which feature specific valuable focus points relevant to that particular area of law.
Lex Machina - Full Federal empowers legal professionals to gain crucial insights on the litigation histories and tendencies of the judges, courts, counsel, parties, findings, remedies and damages associated with the cases that matter most to them. Request a free demo of Lex Machina to see legal analytics in action.