What qualifies as admissible evidence?
Admissible evidence includes verifiable materials such as:
Official records and filings
Government or regulatory documentation
Peer-reviewed research
Verifiable datasets
Credible investigative reporting
Firsthand testimony submitted via structured voice deposition
Evidence must be:
Relevant to the contested statement
Properly sourced and attributed
Capable of withstanding adversarial scrutiny
Evidence that cannot be verified, lacks sourcing, or is purely speculative will not be admitted. Fabricated or AI-generated evidence results in immediate default judgment against the submitting party and potential criminal liability.
Are opinions or interpretations allowed?
Interpretation is permitted—but only insofar as it explains the relevance of your evidence to the contested claim.
Not permitted:
Pure opinion
Speculation without evidentiary support
Advocacy or persuasive argument
Narrative without factual grounding
The rule is simple: evidence comes first. Reasoning follows.
You can explain what your evidence means. You cannot substitute your explanation for the evidence itself.
