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Free · For everyone · Utah

You matter. Your rights matter. Justice belongs to all of us — or none of us has it.

You deserve to understand your rights, and to speak to the court in the way that is most effective. Ask a question below — free, in plain English, grounded in real Utah law, never made up.

—  Richard L. SandersFounder, 4All.Help

On the law

Justice William J. Brennan Jr.

01 / 22

The vision

An advanced suite of legal assistance tools for anyone, anywhere in the nation — and especially for anyone in Utah. Designed over a year by a Utah state and federal trial lawyer with more than eleven years of experience, who has devoted his practice to closing the great gap between justice and those who cannot afford it.

By bridging that gap, the intention is to restore and strengthen institutional trust in the courts — and to help everyone, especially the poor, the incarcerated, the desperate, the overwhelmed, and the frightened, to understand what is happening, to know their rights and the choices before them, and to raise their voices through proper documents drafted for them: built on those rights and on each person’s own decisions, no matter their situation, their means, or even their native language.

This suite is meant for the common benefit of all Americans, and above all for all Utahns. It holds complete knowledge of the law of Utah — updated every week as new appellate opinions issue — and complete knowledge (or soon shall) of the laws of every state in the union.

The intention is not profit. Thousands of hours have gone into inventing new technologies for a single purpose: to make certain this toolkit cannot fail, cannot invent false cases, and cannot assist any effort to violate or ignore the law — while never failing to raise the law in your defense, and to help you require the Court to obey it. One goal has guided all of it: to give every person, however destitute, the means to engage the process effectively, to understand it, and to be free of the fear of the unknown — and to strengthen public confidence by helping everyone remember, raise, and assert their legitimate constitutional rights, exactly as the framers of Utah’s Constitution themselves warned and encouraged:

Frequent recurrence to fundamental principles is essential to the security of individual rights and the perpetuity of free government.Utah Const. art. I, § 27

It is my vision — as a member of this community, an officer of the court, and an advocate for the people — to assist the court and the people in the process of justice, and to restore and improve the people’s confidence in the judicial system, on which our whole government, and indeed our whole society, depends.

~ Richard Sanders

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Built by a Utah attorney. Answers are legal information, not legal advice.