NEWS FROM TECHSHOW – Part 2

I hadn’t planned on writing another article about TechShow. But a few readers wanted more. More about some of the other new products incorporating AI that I discovered on the exhibit floor.

I understand.  Space limitations allowed me to mention only five in my last column (April 20 issue).

So here are descriptions of additional products. Let me repeat my disclaimer from the prior article: I have not personally evaluated these products yet. This article is not meant to be an endorsement of any particular product or vendor. Not by myself, nor the PBA. The descriptions of the products are those of the vendors.

That said, let’s get started.

LegalBridge (https://legalbridge.ai) is, to the best of my knowledge, the very first law practice management platform specifically for immigration law firms, global mobility teams and Fortune 500 companies. They claim to have over 80 law firms processing over 10,000 cases annually on their platform. Their AI-powered operating system automates drafting, streamlines workflows and centralizes client and case management. It addresses the inefficiencies of manual repetitive legal work and fragmented data systems by bringing everything into a single structured platform. The platform enables end-to-end case handling, from intake and drafting to assembly and final review.

The functionality promised turns an immigration law firm into Oz. As an example, they posit that while you’re meeting with clients, their AI is scanning every case, detecting things like missing birth certificates, and texting automated reminders in the client’s native language. They say it knows about missing support letters before you do, and it’s already sent follow-ups on your behalf. They state that immigration cases average 47 documents, and their AI tracks all of them, automatically.

An interested client simply snaps a photo of his or her passport. Their AI extracts that data and populates your intake questionnaire in seconds. It works with visas, I-94s and birth certificates, too. So, your intake reduces from a 45-minute call to “check your email and confirm.” Their software is designed to handle the entire client journey: consultation, scheduling, e-signing, invoicing, AI intake, smart questionnaires & forms, document collection, document drafting, deadline tracking, and USCIS reports.

CaseQube (https://www.caseqube.com/legal-accounting-software/) Are you using an outdated case management and/or time and billing program? Underwhelmed by the current choices that all seem too complex for your needs? Using QuickBooks in addition, doing lots of double entry and paying through the nose? This may be your answer.

CaseQube replaces multiple disconnected tools with one unified platform—offering AI-driven intake, automated workflows, secure document management, built-in payments and trust-compliant accounting in one place. Most platforms stop at billing or case tracking; CaseQube goes end-to-end. The product is designed for lawyers from solos to more complex midsize firms and incorporates compliance-first trust management alongside contemporary financial reporting tools.

The learning curve is purported to be very short due to its simplified intuitive interface. They state that firms typically go live in under 30 days. They provide onboarding assistance, training, and data migration services to ensure a smooth transition with minimal disruption.

Incredibly, PBA has already negotiated exclusive preferred pricing plus priority onboarding and tailored support for members. Your dues dollars at work! Simply connect with them through PBA’s website.

Verbit AI (www.verbit.ai) seems to be a direct competitor to the second-chair product presented in Part 1 of this article. Its product, Legal Visor, is designed to give attorneys and legal professionals an edge by turning legal transcripts and live testimony into real-time, actionable insights. Built for litigation, deposition review and case strategy, Verbit’s Legal Visor combines advanced AI transcription with automated analysis – flagging inconsistencies, generating summaries and helping you identify key admissions and contradictions faster than manual review.

Like its competitor, this product purports to provide real-time contextual insight to help legal teams adjust questions, refine strategy and avoid missing critical details – all while the witness is still speaking. As testimonies unfold, it will highlight inconsistencies vs. case records, surface key admissions and pivotal wording, identify speakers with precision and automatically create summaries.

LegalSifter ReviewPro™ (https://www.legalsifter.com/) is a contract review program that promises to empower law firms to use their own playbooks and negotiation standards to accelerate contract review and negotiation, by turning your proprietary knowledge into a repeatable, scalable process. With ReviewPro, you can purportedly deliver fully redlined contracts in minutes, without sacrificing quality, oversight, or profitability, freeing up attorneys to stay focused on high-value judgment instead of markup.

It’s emphasized that ReviewPro isn’t an AI-chatbot. It’s a purpose-built platform combining over a decade of contract intelligence with AI you can trust. It highlights over 2,200 legal “Sifters” trained on real-world contracts. It provides structured, explainable edits – not hallucinated suggestions. It provides transparent reasoning behind every redline. It has “seamless” Microsoft Word integration.

Litmus AI (https://litmas.ai/) promises it’s an AI purpose-built end-to-end litigation suite designed to manage evidence, research law, draft motions and more, with built-in safeguards that prevent hallucinations and ensure defensible work product. It’s emphasized that every legal citation is verified against authoritative sources with full Shepardization. It states that their AI has context-aware reasoning that understands jurisdiction-specific nuances.

This product is designed for multi-attorney teams, complex matters, and large case volumes. One particular aspect of the suite’s offerings, Litiverse Graph, is particularly intriguing. It provides visual mapping of case relationships — parties, entities, facts, timelines — so you can see leverage points and connections that might otherwise remain hidden in document review. This visualization enhances litigation intelligence by surfacing nonobvious connections. Litigators still feeling the loss of former tools CaseMap and TimeMap may find relief here.

Rather than try and squeeze in another one or two products, let me say that this is still just a sampling of new products which have hit the market.  So, what’s your next step? Go back to my recent articles about creating a plan for your firm on why and how you want to incorporate AI into your practice. Create the ethical guardrails, due diligence requirements and oversight necessary first.

Then your firm will be ready for me to help you (PBA members) find the products you’re looking for and refer you to the right people to assist with implementation.

Maybe you want some assistance just to create your plan. I can help put you in touch with well-vetted advisors. And finally, I have direct contacts at every one of the vendors included in Part 1 and 2 of this series. I am happy to put PBA members in touch.

 

A version of this article originally appeared in the May 18, 2026 issue of Pennsylvania Bar News. © 2026 Freedman Consulting, Inc.

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