Taylor

RightsRadar β€” Charged with a crime? Find the holes in their case

byβ€’

Hey Hunters πŸ‘‹

I'm Taylor, based in Alberta, Canada. I built RightsRadar because I kept watching the same scene play out: someone charged with an offence, sitting across a kitchen table from a stack of police disclosure they were never going to read β€” and lawyers charging $300–$500/hour to read it for them.

What it does: Upload your disclosure (PDFs, scanned pages, photos of pages, Word docs β€” OCR is built in) and RightsRadar returns a plain-English list of potential Charter (Canada) or Constitutional (US) issues, with the exact page and quote each one came from. Things like:

  • Arbitrary detention (s.9 Charter / 4th Amdt.)

  • Right to counsel breaches (s.10(b) / Miranda)

  • Search & seizure problems (s.8 / 4th Amdt.)

  • Disclosure gaps (Stinchcombe / Brady)

  • Confession voluntariness (s.7 / 5th Amdt.)

What it covers: All 13 Canadian provinces & territories, all 50 US states + DC. Each scan is tailored to that jurisdiction's rules, statutes, and case law.

What it explicitly is NOT: legal advice, a substitute for a lawyer, or a guarantee anything will hold up in court. It's an issue spotter designed to help people walk into their lawyer's office with sharper questions β€” or help defence lawyers triage long disclosure faster.

Pricing: One-time per scan. $29.99 for files up to ~200 pages, $109.99 for larger files up to ~330 pages. No subscription, no account games.

Why I built it: Access to justice in Canada is broken for the middle class. People who earn just over the legal aid cutoff get crushed. If a $30 scan saves someone one billable hour by helping them know which questions to ask, it has paid for itself five times over.

What I'd love feedback on:

  • Defence lawyers / paralegals / public defenders: would you actually use this for triage? What's missing?

  • Anyone who has been through the system: what did you wish you understood about your own file?

  • Hunters in general: does the framing land? Anything that smells off?

Brutal feedback welcome. I'd rather hear it now than from a customer.

πŸ”— https://rightsradar.replit.app

β€” Taylor

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Rian Robertson

Fascinating tool, Taylor...tackling access to justice head-on with smart disclosure analysis. Love the one-time pricing and clear disclaimers.

If you're up for it, I'm launching The Sponge on PH soon...an AI-powered flashcard app with a browser extension that turns any webpage into study material via spaced repetition. Would appreciate a follow (See "PRODUCT HUNT LAUNCH" Link in my profile).