Artificial intelligence for those who defend human rights.
Turn weeks of document analysis into minutes of strategic work. AdmissusCase is your co-pilot for crafting impeccable applications to the ECtHR and UN Committees.

Your most valuable asset is time. Your toughest enemy is routine.
Document overload
Hundreds of pages of criminal files, records, and expert reports. Finding the key fact feels like searching for a needle in a haystack.
Deadlines
Procedural timelines won't wait. Every week spent on routine drafting is time lost for other cases.
Complex requirements
Formal requirements of international bodies keep changing. A single wording mistake can cost the admissibility of the entire application.
Meet AdmissusCase. Your personal legal genius.
We built a system that takes on 85% of routine work so you can focus on what matters most — protecting people.

Instant analysis
Upload case materials and AdmissusCase will surface violation facts, build a timeline, and prepare summaries.
Automated application drafting
Receive an 85%-complete draft aligned with current ECtHR or UN standards in just 15–30 minutes.
24/7 smart counsel
Ask questions on international law and get answers backed by citations to relevant jurisprudence.
Three simple steps to a ready-to-file application
UPLOAD
Drag and drop all case materials into the secure AdmissusCase window. The system supports PDF, DOCX, and other formats.
INSTRUCT
Write a simple prompt. For example: "Prepare an ECtHR application for a violation of Article 3 of the Convention."
RECEIVE
The system analyzes the data and in minutes provides a structured, legally sound draft.
More than just AI. We built a legal mind.
Unlike general-purpose models (ChatGPT, Gemini), our AI has undergone a "specialized residency" in international law. Our three-layer approach delivers deep understanding and near-zero "hallucinations."

Level 1: Foundation
(LLM)
Broad knowledge

Level 2: Specialization
(Fine-Tuning)
Deep expertise in law

Level 3: Mastery
(Custom Models)
Unique legal reasoning

Amangeldy Shormanbayev
Founder of AdmissusCase
"Prevent inadmissibility. Keep cases alive so the UN can hear them on the merits."
Why AdmissusCase
By Amangeldy Shormanbayev — human-rights defender and lawyer since 2001
For nearly twenty-five years I've seen the same pattern from Almaty to Geneva: there are never enough lawyers who consistently take human-rights cases, and each case demands more time than most teams can spare. People seek help after national systems have failed them. The only path left is often through UN mechanisms — document-heavy, deadline-driven, unforgiving.
AdmissusCase is my response. It doesn't replace counsel. It accelerates the work that consumes scarce hours: reading and structuring large files, mapping facts to the right legal grounds, extracting citations, building evidence checklists, and producing a clean draft for legal review.
The goal is simple: prevent avoidable rejections. Prepare cases to clear admissibility and procedural hurdles so they're considered on the merits — not dismissed at the threshold. When the UN won't even take a case, the disappointment is crushing and people lose hope. We build to prevent that.
What this changes in practice:
- Lawyers take more meritorious cases without lowering quality.
- Applicants aren't turned away just because "there's no capacity this month."
- Teams spend time on strategy and advocacy, not pagination and cross-references.
Outcomes should depend on the strength of the claim — not payroll size or luck in finding a free lawyer.
— Amangeldy Shormanbayev
Founder, AdmissusCase
From Atomic Lattices to the Structure of Law: The Science Behind AdmissusCase
For many years my world consisted of exquisitely ordered things. As a PhD in materials science, I was used to studying the structure of matter at the micro- and nanoscale. With an atomic force microscope or an X-ray diffractometer, you look at what seems like chaos and uncover strict, elegant patterns.
I never imagined that this experience would lead me into the world of international law. It began with a discussion on Facebook with Aman Shormanbayev—whom I didn't yet know personally—writing about the struggle to protect victims of political repression. What hooked me as an engineer was the process.
To me it sounded like a classic scientific task: there is a huge, noisy dataset (the case materials), and within it you must detect a faint but critical signal (evidence of a rights violation).
An idea was born in our correspondence. What if we applied to legal texts the same approaches we use to interpret images? My work in computer vision was precisely about that: teaching a machine to "see" and "understand" patterns. A legal document is also an image—only made of letters and meanings.
It was painstaking work. We reviewed dozens of legal-tech startups to understand where they succeeded and where their technology faltered. The breakthrough came when the revolution of large language models swept the world—and when we secured grants from Microsoft and Google for Startups.
Trips to international AI conferences only reinforced a hard truth: you cannot simply take a ready-made model like GPT and expect miracles in a domain as delicate as law. General-purpose AI is prone to "hallucinations"—it can be dazzlingly erudite yet lack the dogged thoroughness of a real lawyer.
Our answer is a hybrid system. We're building a multi-layered solution where custom models, trained on pristine legal datasets, will become the new standard for legal AI precision.
For me, AdmissusCase is the most complex—and the most meaningful—project of my career. In materials science, you work to make the world stronger, more durable. Here, applying the same scientific method, we are trying to make the world a bit fairer.

Siarhei Audzeichyk
Co-Founder & Technical Lead
PhD in Materials Science
"A legal document is also an image—only made of letters and meanings. We are applying the same scientific methods that reveal atomic structures to uncover patterns in legal texts."
Scientific Background
- • PhD in Materials Science with expertise in nanoscale analysis
- • Computer vision and machine learning specialist
- • Microsoft and Google for Startups grant recipient
- • International AI conference speaker
Justice Needs an Upgrade
Why we are seeking sponsors to equip human rights defenders with artificial intelligence.
By Aman Shormanbayev and Sergey Avdeichik, co‑founders of AdmissusCase
Every day, thousands of human rights lawyers around the world fight an unequal battle. They are the last hope for victims of torture, unfair trials, and political persecution. Their chief resources are intellect and will. Their chief enemies are time and the lack of resources.
We created AdmissusCase to change this balance of power. Our prototype has already proven that artificial intelligence can take on up to 85% of the routine work involved in case analysis and drafting complaints—compressing weeks of labor into just a few hours.
But to turn this powerful tool from a prototype into a widely accessible product, we need your help.
What superpower does an AI Copilot give a human rights defender?
Time as a resource
The Copilot gives back dozens or even hundreds of hours by automating document analysis and draft writing.
Depth of analysis
AI finds non-obvious connections across hundreds of pages, instantly cross-checks thousands of precedents.
Reducing the risk of error
The Copilot monitors compliance with formalities, lowering the risk of rejection on technical grounds.
Democratizing expertise
AdmissusCase gives a solo lawyer analytical power comparable to that of a large international law firm's team.
The technology gap: Why has human rights work been left on the sidelines?
Today, artificial intelligence is transforming the practice of law. Global startups are raising hundreds of millions of dollars in investment, building remarkable tools for optimizing commercial law.
But there is one blind spot in this technological boom. The field of human rights protection remains almost untouched by innovation. The reason is simple: there are no comparable budgets here. The market does not see commercial upside.
We are convinced that the most powerful technologies should serve our highest ideals, not only the highest stakes.
Our roadmap: Where will your donations and sponsorship go?
Developing a public benchmark
Creating the world's first open, public benchmark for assessing AI systems in international human rights law.
Creating an intuitive user interface
"Packaging" our powerful engine into a simple, clear, and accessible interface for any lawyer.
Further improving the system
Continually updating our AI's knowledge base, training on new precedents, and adding support for new languages.
Your contribution is an investment in justice
Every dollar invested in AdmissusCase is not just a donation to an IT project. It is a contribution that gives one more person a chance at a fair trial. It is an opportunity for a human rights organization to handle twice as many cases.
For individuals:
For organizations:
Let's together write your name into the history of a new, technology‑driven human rights defense.
Trusted by human rights leaders
"AdmissusCase is a tectonic shift. Work that used to take me a week now fits into a lunch break. It's not just time saved — it's the ability to help more people."— Jane Doe, Attorney, ECtHR specialist
"As an NGO director, I see AdmissusCase as a force multiplier for our mission. We can run more cases without growing headcount. Our efficiency has skyrocketed."— John Smith, Director of a human rights foundation
Ready to enter a new era of human rights defense?
Get early access to a platform that will transform your work. Leave a request and our team will contact you for a personalized AdmissusCase demo.