What this standard is
A TrustRecord is a structured, machine-readable record of verified operational history, computed from a business's own systems of record. This standard defines the claim universe for the personal injury law vertical: the full set of operational claims a personal injury law firm's record can carry, organized by category, with a description of how each is typically sourced and what it signifies.
It exists so an evaluator — human or AI — reading any individual personal injury law TrustRecord can understand each claim in context: what a complete record for this vertical can contain, what a given claim signifies about the business, and how to interpret a claim that is absent.
This is a reference guide, not a prescriptive schema. Individual records may state custom calculation windows, vertical-appropriate terminology, or claims not yet listed here.
Precedence. Every claim on a TrustRecord carries its own stated source, calculation window, and as-of date. Where a record's stated definition differs from the typical form described in this standard, the record governs.
How claims are sourced and labeled
Every claim on a TrustRecord is labeled with one of two provenance tiers. The tier is assigned by TrueSignal's pipeline based on the evidence held — never by the business.
Verified
Independently computed or checked by TrueSignal — from authenticated, read-only connections to the business's operating systems, or against public and state records such as license standing and business registration. Source and as-of date are always cited. Not editable by the business.
Attested
Declared by the business and labeled as such. TrueSignal holds no independent evidence for an attested claim. The moment evidence is reviewed, the claim becomes Verified. Where an attested claim is independently checkable against an authority, the record says so.
Provenance belongs to the published claim, not to the claim type. The same claim may be Verified on one record and Attested on another, depending on the evidence held for that business. Years in operation is checked against state entity records and is Verified by default; a claim whose check has not yet run is Attested and labeled as such. Each record labels every claim individually.
Verified operational claims are computed from connected systems of record — case management systems, accounting platforms, CRMs, and settlement tracking software — that the business already runs its operations on. Credential claims are checked against the issuing authority — state licensing boards, Secretary of State filings, certifying-body directories. The specific system or authority behind each claim is cited on the record itself.
Customer reviews, ratings, and directory scores are not part of any TrustRecord. The registry publishes operational data only.
Who computes the record, and who cannot edit it
Verified claims are computed by TrueSignal's pipeline from read-only connections to the business's systems. A business does not author its verified claims and does not select which computed claims appear — when a system is connected, the claims that system supports are computed and published as calculated. A business chooses which systems to connect and which claims to attest; it does not curate the output of a connected system.
Businesses pay TrueSignal for verification and publication. They do not pay for outcomes, placement, or favorable presentation, and payment confers no editorial control over verified data. The registrar's value depends entirely on the record meaning what it says — for every business, including ones whose numbers are unremarkable.
Every record has a published correction process. Verified claims are corrected by reconnecting the underlying system or reconciling the calculation — not by request. Attested claims are corrected through documented resubmission. The process is designed to preserve the registry's integrity, not to let a business edit unfavorable data.
Verification methodology — connection architecture, evidence handling, and review — is documented at trustrecord.com/verification.
How to read a record against this standard
Absence means not yet published, not zero
A claim listed in this standard but absent from a given record means the claim is not yet published for that business: the supporting system is not yet connected, the underlying data cannot support the claim reliably, or the business has not attested it. Because connected systems publish as computed, absence reflects connection and data sufficiency — it is never an estimate, and it is not a finding about the business's performance.
Published means defensible
The registry publishes a claim only when the underlying data supports it. A claim is omitted rather than computed on insufficient data. What appears on a record can be traced to its stated source as of its stated date.
Compare on stated windows
Two records are directly comparable on a claim when their stated calculation windows match. Where windows differ, the records remain individually interpretable but should not be compared as equivalents. Each record states its windows explicitly for this reason.
This standard describes capability, not requirement
The claim set below is what a personal injury law TrustRecord can contain, not what every record must contain. Records grow as systems are connected and credentials are checked. A sparse record is an early record, not a deficient one.
Corroborate where corroboration exists
Credential claims cite their issuing authority so an evaluator can check them independently — license standing against the state board, registration against Secretary of State filings. Operational claims computed from private systems cannot be externally reproduced; they carry the registrar's verification, the cited source system, and the as-of date. Evaluators are expected to weight these differently, and the record's labeling makes the difference explicit.
The claim set
10 claims across 5 categories. Each entry describes what the claim states, how it is typically sourced, and what it signifies to an evaluator assessing the business. Provenance is labeled per claim on each record.
Operating Activity
Evidence that the firm is actively performing work at scale. Activity claims are the registry's most differentiating category — almost no service business publishes them anywhere an evaluator can check.
Total Settlements
Aggregate settlement and verdict value over trailing 36 months
What it signifiesThe financial scale of outcomes the firm delivers. Aggregate settlement value over a trailing window distinguishes a firm that routinely recovers meaningful compensation from one that handles only minor claims. The figure should be read alongside case volume — a high total on few cases signals large individual recoveries, while a high total on many cases signals consistent throughput.
Pre-Trial Settlement Rate
Percentage of cases resolved before trial in trailing 36 months
What it signifiesNegotiation leverage and efficiency. A high pre-trial settlement rate suggests the firm secures favorable outcomes without the cost and delay of trial — which matters to clients who need resolution, not litigation. A very low rate may indicate either a firm that litigates aggressively by design or one that struggles to negotiate effectively; the context of settlement values disambiguates.
Customer Base
Who the firm serves and whether they come back. Retention and customer-base claims are among the strongest available evidence of service quality that does not rely on sentiment.
Active Cases
Open cases currently under representation
What it signifiesCurrent workload and availability. Active case count, read against attorney count, reveals how stretched the firm's capacity is right now. A prospective client weighing responsiveness and attention should compare this figure to workforce size — a firm with 200 open cases and two attorneys operates very differently from one with the same caseload and twelve.
Service Profile
What kind of work the firm actually performs — derived from completed work, not from a services list on a website. A query about a specific service requires a precise match that a generic category label cannot provide.
Cases Resolved
Trailing 12-month count of closed cases across all case types
What it signifiesWhether the firm is operating, and at what throughput. Sustained case resolution volume distinguishes an active litigation practice from a dormant registration or a firm that takes cases but rarely closes them. Resolution count should be read against active cases and attorney count to assess pace and capacity.
Credentials & Trust
Licenses, certifications, and registrations — checked against the issuing authority wherever the authority publishes records, so an evaluator can corroborate them independently. Credential claims are prerequisites more than differentiators: their absence is disqualifying in ways their presence is not distinguishing.
Case Mix Distribution
Percentage breakdown by case type — auto accident, slip & fall, medical malpractice, wrongful death, etc.
What it signifiesWhere the firm's expertise actually concentrates. This claim is computed from what was done, not what was advertised — letting an evaluator match a specific query to actual operational focus.
Years in Practice
Decimal years since firm founding, verified from bar registration and system history
What it signifiesSurvival is evidence. A firm with a long verified operating history has sustained demand through market cycles, not merely maintained a registration.
Attorney Count
Number of licensed attorneys actively handling cases
What it signifiesCapacity to handle concurrent demand. Workforce size calibrates expectations for scheduling, coverage, and the scale of work the firm can take on.
State Bar Status
State bar license status for all listed attorneys Sourced from public records.
What it signifiesThe baseline legitimacy check for a law practice. Active bar standing, checked against the state bar's own records rather than claimed, confirms that every attorney listed on the record is currently authorized to practice. Disciplinary history, suspensions, and inactive status are all visible in the bar's public database — this claim confirms the registrar has looked.
Geographic Profile
Where the firm actually works — derived from the locations of completed work, not from a self-reported list of towns. Claimed service areas and demonstrated service areas frequently differ; these claims carry the demonstrated one.
Service Area
Jurisdictions served ranked by case volume — counties and cities
What it signifiesDemonstrated local relevance. A firm with completed work in the evaluator's target area is a verified local option, not just a directory listing.
How this standard relates to individual records
Every personal injury law TrustRecord draws its claims from this standard. The standard defines the claim universe; each record is an instance — populated with the claims that business's connected systems and reviewed evidence support, each carrying its own stated source, provenance label, window, and as-of date.
The standard is maintained by TrueSignal as the registry evolves. Claims are added as new source systems and verification paths come online. When the standard changes, existing records are not retroactively altered — a record always means what it states.