How Amie was built and what she's allowed to do.
Trust matters when the topic is your divorce. Here's the honest version of what Amie is, what she's trained on, and the lines we draw to keep her useful and safe.
Trained on California family law
Amie's knowledge base contains the California Family Code provisions relevant to dissolution, the Judicial Council's instructions for every FL- form, and the standard procedures for filing, serving, and finalizing a divorce. Citations are baked in — when she states a rule, she can point you to the Family Code section that says it.
Reviewed by attorneys
We partner with a California family-law firm that audits Amie's answers across hundreds of test scenarios. They flag anything that crosses the line from “explaining the law” to “giving advice on a specific case,” and we tighten the prompt accordingly. A published assessment from our partner firm is in progress.
Guardrails by design
Amie is explicitly instructed to never give legal advice on a specific case, predict outcomes, or recommend strategy. When a question crosses that line — “should I ask for X?” — she names the limit and offers an attorney introduction. This is enforced in her system prompt and in our eval suite that runs against every prompt change.
What Amie will not do
- • Give legal advice on your specific situation
- • Predict how a judge will rule on custody, support, or property
- • Tell you what to ask for in a settlement
- • Handle contested cases (we refer you to a partner attorney)
- • Pretend to be a human
- • Sell, share, or train other AIs on your case data
The model behind Amie
Amie's replies come from Google Gemini (the latest preview model) with our custom system prompt and tools. The system prompt is iterated against a structured evaluation suite — every change is regression tested across 20+ scenarios covering coach mode, script mode, bilingual conversations, edge cases like domestic violence, and form-collection accuracy. We don't ship a prompt change that breaks our evals.
Try her out →