Why PriorLex Exists.
Most people do not understand what happens after a traffic ticket.
Not because the law is hidden, but because the process is rarely explained in human terms.
PriorLex exists to study how people actually move through official processes — what they fear, what they misunderstand, what they do first, and what they later wish they had known.
What PriorLex is
PriorLex is a legal process infrastructure project. It maps how people move through official systems — combining public information, workflow structure, court-routing context, and anonymous behavioral research.
It begins with California traffic processes because traffic tickets are common, stressful, and often misunderstood.
What PriorLex is not
- PriorLex is not a law firm.
- It does not provide legal advice.
- It does not create an attorney-client relationship.
- It does not recommend what any individual person should do.
- It does not replace a licensed attorney.
Who is building this
PriorLex was founded by Sedat Orhan, with a background in law and legal research (LL.M., UC Irvine).
The project focuses on how people make decisions under uncertainty — especially when official procedures are confusing, time-sensitive, or difficult to understand.
Why research matters
Most legal systems are designed around rules, forms, and deadlines.
PriorLex studies the human side of those systems: fear, confusion, delay, payment decisions, lawyer-consideration thresholds, and regret.
The goal is not to tell people what to do. The goal is to make official processes easier to understand.
How we protect the boundary
- We show aggregated research patterns, not personal recommendations.
- We avoid publishing individual identifying information.
- We describe official process information in general terms.
- We encourage users with serious or uncertain matters to consult a licensed attorney.
- We keep Privacy and Disclaimer pages visible across the site.
The law is written.
How people decide is not.
