Tracewire is an AI research assistant for true crime creators. It searches public records, court documents, and news archives, then builds case files and timelines so you can focus on what you do best: telling the story.
Every true crime podcaster, YouTuber, and writer hits the same wall. The audience is massive. The stories are endless. But the research takes forever: digging through PACER, cross-referencing news archives, building timelines by hand, verifying every fact. The bottleneck was never the storytelling. It was the digging.
Court filings, arrest records, property deeds, obituaries, news archives. Tracewire searches across dozens of public databases and compiles what matters into a single case file.
Feed it a case name and watch a chronological timeline assemble itself. Every event sourced, every date verified, every connection mapped.
Names, addresses, phone numbers, aliases. Tracewire spots connections across documents that would take a human researcher weeks to find.
Get structured briefs ready for scripting. Key facts, dramatis personae, unanswered questions, and suggested angles, all in one document you can hand to your editor or just start writing from.
Give Tracewire a case name, a suspect, a victim, a location. That's all it needs to start pulling threads.
Public court filings, news archives, social media traces, government databases. Tracewire searches, reads, and extracts what's relevant.
A structured dossier with timeline, key players, source links, and research brief. Everything you need to start writing, recording, or filming.
Tracewire exists because the best true crime stories are trapped behind walls of paperwork, scattered across a hundred databases, buried in archives nobody has time to read. AI changes that equation. Not by replacing the storyteller, but by giving them a research team that never sleeps.