COVID-19 wasn’t the only event that made 2020 a busy year for legal research and software provider Casetext Inc. In this year alone, Casetext launched its artificial intelligence-assisted brief writer Compose, closed a $8.2 million investment round and used a PPP loan to weather COVID-19′s economic disruption. Today, the company’s evolution continues with employment law updates to its Compose platform, the tool’s first expansion into a specific practice area.

Compose can now help lawyers draft a complete discovery motion, certify a class, compel arbitration and write 15 other briefs for employment law matters in federal court and California and New York state-level courts. The employment law collection can be subscribed to separately from Compose’s original offering of automating briefs for discovery motions, federal practice, class actions and dispositive motions in federal court, noted Casetext co-founder and CEO Jake Heller during a presentation.

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