With New ‘Opinion Minion’ App, Point Your Phone At A Cite, Get the Case

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A new app called Opinion Minion uses your mobile phone’s camera to read case citations and then deliver you the opinion from Google Scholar.

The app, which describes itself as “your legal helper,” uses text-recognition software to read the case citation and then search for it on Google Scholar. As of this writing, it is available only for the iPhone and iPad, but developer Thomas Peavler said an Android version will be ready soon.

Simply hold the app’s grey bar over the citation, and it scans the text and then delivers what it considers to be the best result, which you can expand into a list of all results.

Hold it over a citation, and it pulls up the case.

Click the star under the case in the results list to save it to your Google Scholar library or click the caption to go to the full text.

It works with hard-copy documents or with documents on a computer screen. If for any reason the scan does not work, you can type in the citation.

By default, Opinion Minion automatically looks for and captures a citation. If you point it at a string of citations, I found, that’s a problem, because it does not know which one to capture.

But a toggle switch turns off the auto-capture and lets you tap the screen to capture a citation. That way, you can be sure to have the precise citation aligned.

Why Use It?

All of which begs the question, “Why?”

The app’s website offers two reasons. One is speed:

“In a time-pressed courtroom, you don’t have time to go to the internet and type in a case citation. Opinion Minion taks you right to the case you need!”

The other reason it offers is accessibility:

“Opinion Minion is powered by Google