About · The Archive

There are two sides
to every story.

Precedent100 was built on a simple premise: simple disputes can escalate into life-altering moments — and the record of what happened deserves to be preserved by the community, not just the institutions that created it.

§ 01 · Who

Run by 100 Million Productions LLC.

Precedent100 is a project of 100 Million Productions LLC, an independent media company that documents stories the mainstream record often misses or oversimplifies.

Cases are submitted anonymously and reviewed internally among members. We do not publish the names of submitters. We do not reveal sources. We confirm internally that there are two sides to every story before any case enters the archive.

This is community-built infrastructure. The archive grows because people like you contribute to it.

§ 02 · Mission

The record of what happened.

⚑ Mission Statement
We document the record. We hold the judicial system accountable as a community.
01
Document
Public records. Verified reporting. No editorial verdict beyond what has been legally established.
02
Preserve
Cases don't disappear when the news cycle moves on. The archive keeps the record permanent and searchable.
03
Accountable
Judges, prosecutors, and outcomes — tracked over time. Patterns become visible the longer we watch.
§ 03 · Origin

Why this exists.

Precedent100 came about because of false narratives — the kind that get repeated until they become accepted as fact, even when the public record tells a different story.

We've watched simple disputes escalate into life-altering moments. We've watched the system process people through a machine designed for efficiency rather than accuracy. We've watched cases get reduced to a single headline, then forgotten.

This archive exists to make sure the full record stays available. Not the headline. The record.

§ 04 · The List

You are not forgotten.

⚑ Filed · Preserved
Every case on file is on the list.
The list does not forget.

Whether you're a defendant, a victim, a family member, a witness, or someone who knows a story the record forgot — your case has a place here. Submission is anonymous. Review is internal. Inclusion is preserved as part of the public record.

⚑ The Third POV · Story Honorarium
Have a first-person story? We pay $100 minimum for verified accounts.
Defendants, victims, family, witnesses, civil wins — the record is better when the people who lived it speak.
Share Your Story →
§ 05 · The Third POV

100mil.tv — the third point of view.

↗ Companion Project
Every case has the prosecution's story.
Every case has the defense's story.
100mil.tv is the third — yours, mine, and every reader's.
100mil.tv is the storytelling arm of 100 Million Productions. Where Precedent100 archives the record, 100mil.tv tells the story behind it — from the angle the courtroom doesn't allow. Original series. Real cases. Community perspective.
Visit 100mil.tv →
§ 06 · Methodology

How we work.

Sources are public. Every case in the archive is sourced from court records, official press releases, verified news reporting, and publicly available documentation. We link to our sources at the bottom of every case file.

We don't allege. We document what has been legally established. We do not declare guilt or innocence beyond what the courts have decided. When a case is overturned, we update the record. When new information emerges, we update the record.

Corrections are welcome. If you find something inaccurate, the legal page has a contact form. We review all correction requests internally and update the record when warranted.

The archive is permanent. Cases don't get deleted because someone is uncomfortable with the record. They get updated when the record changes.

§ 07 · Credibility

Why trust the record.

"We shall hold the judicial system accountable as a community."

Credibility in this work is not granted — it is built case by case, source by source, correction by correction.

Precedent100 is not a wire service. We are not paid by anyone. We do not receive press releases from the courts and rewrite them. We do the work of going to the record and reading it ourselves.

That's how patterns become visible. That's how the same statute being applied differently in two courtrooms becomes a story instead of a footnote. That's how a judge's tendencies become public knowledge instead of insider information.

The judicial system is supposed to be public. We are simply doing the work of making it visible.

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