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AI in the Courtroom and City Hall: How Governments Are Putting AI to Work

From anonymizing court rulings to speeding up benefits and aiding policing, governments worldwide are quietly deploying AI in public services — with real benefits and real risks.

By · June 12, 2026 · 2 min read
AI in the Courtroom and City Hall: How Governments Are Putting AI to Work

AI is increasingly working inside government — not as a futuristic promise, but in courtrooms, city halls and police departments today. From anonymizing court rulings to helping citizens navigate services and aiding investigations, public institutions worldwide are quietly putting AI to work. The technology promises faster, more responsive government, but it also raises hard questions about fairness and oversight.

Smarter public services

The most visible impact is convenience. Digital agents powered by natural-language processing now let citizens get quick, reliable information about government services, applications and processes on demand — cutting through bureaucracy and wait times. Behind the scenes, AI streamlines routine administrative tasks, helping overstretched agencies process applications and respond to the public more efficiently.

AI in the justice system

Courts are adopting AI for real tasks. Croatia has operationalized ANON, a tool that automatically anonymizes first-instance court judgments and proposes them for publication — speeding transparency. In Peru, the Amauta Pro system, built by a Lima court, has been piloted on domestic-violence cases, using AI and standardized templates to help determine protection measures. These are concrete deployments improving access to justice, not pilots in name only.

Policing with algorithms

Law enforcement is a major frontier. AI systems can comb through vast amounts of CCTV footage, social media and online data to help locate missing persons, identify suspects and combat human trafficking, while traffic systems flag violations and crime forecasts guide resource allocation. The potential to do more with limited resources is significant — but so is the scrutiny these uses attract.

The measured approach

Caution is the watchword. Most police agencies in 2026 are taking a deliberate approach to AI, shaped by limited resources and the need for careful testing, ethical rules and public trust. Research underscores that successful adoption depends on aligning AI use with public expectations of fairness, transparency and procedural justice — get that wrong, and trust collapses.

The risks

The stakes are high in government. Bias in algorithms can entrench discrimination in policing or benefits decisions; opaque systems can make life-altering determinations without accountability; and surveillance tools threaten privacy and civil liberties. When the state deploys AI, errors carry outsized consequences, making transparency, human oversight and clear rules essential rather than optional.

The bottom line

Governments are putting AI to work in courts, public services and policing — anonymizing rulings, guiding citizens, and aiding investigations in tangible ways. It is one of the most consequential real-world applications of AI, with the power to make government faster and fairer. But because the state’s decisions affect rights and lives, capturing those benefits demands rigorous safeguards, transparency and public trust.

Photo: TranceMist / BY via flickr