Where trust collapses
- Authority becomes implied rather than explicit.
- Evidence is gathered after the fact instead of captured under custody.
- Claims and decisions drift away from the provenance that should defend them.
Deployment context
For institutions where authority, evidence, and admissibility must survive challenge long after the original act.
LockJaw turns evidence, authority, decision lineage, and refusal into separate, verifiable surfaces that can survive litigation or oversight.
Where trust collapses
Failure without LockJaw
A record exists, but nobody can prove who had authority, who was accountable, what was refused, or whether a claim still rests on admissible provenance.
How the operating model changes
LockJaw turns evidence, authority, decision lineage, and refusal into separate, verifiable surfaces that can survive litigation or oversight.