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Merito

Pro · Devil's Advocate

The brief against you —
before anyone else writes it.

A structured, adversarial review argues the weaknesses in your case section by section, each attack line linking to the exact Case Canvas node it targets, with a concrete list of what would actually defeat it.

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01/03The brief

One section per criterion, in your petition's own argument order.

01

What the brief argues.

01

A real brief, not a single critique.

The adversarial brief assembles section by section, one per criterion, in the same order your petition argues them — a genuine structural mirror of your file, not a random list of complaints.

Section by sectionMirrors your petition's structureEvery claim addressed
02

Every attack points to a real node.

Each argument in the brief links directly to the exact Case Canvas claim or evidence node it targets — click through and see precisely what's being challenged, not an abstract objection.

Deep-links to Case CanvasNo abstract objectionsSee the exact target
03

A concrete list of what would defeat it.

For every section of the brief, a specific document or fact that would resolve it — not vague advice to "strengthen your evidence," a named counter you can actually go get.

One counter per sectionConcrete, not vagueActionable today
02

Your own read of your file is never fully adversarial.

FiledDay 1
Receipt noticeMonth 1
No updateMonth 3
No updateMonth 6
No updateMonth 9
RFE issuedMonth 10

You already believe your own argument.

Reading your file for weaknesses while believing it's strong is a structurally different task than genuinely trying to defeat it.

Scattered criticism doesn't mirror how a case gets read.

A real adversarial review follows your petition's own structure, criterion by criterion — not a random list of unrelated complaints.

Knowing a weakness exists isn't the same as knowing how to fix it.

A criticism without a concrete counter just tells you to worry — it doesn't tell you what document would actually resolve it.

03

Why a chatbot can't argue against your case.

A guess and a structured, section-by-section brief are not the same kind of answer.

General-purpose AI defaults to agreeable.

Ask a chatbot to find problems with your file and it still tends toward encouragement — sustaining a genuinely adversarial posture isn't its default behavior.

It won't structure a brief around your petition's own argument.

A real adversarial brief mirrors your petition's structure, section by section — a chatbot's critique is shaped by the prompt, not by your file's actual argument order.

It stops at the criticism, not the fix.

"This could be stronger" isn't the same as naming the specific document that would actually resolve the objection.

Read the brief against you before an officer writes one.

04

How the brief gets built.

01

The brief assembles from your Case File.

One section per criterion, in your petition's own argument order — built from the same structured Case File every Merito tool reads.

02

Every argument links to its target.

Click any section to open the exact Case Canvas node it's challenging — no abstract objections.

03

Read it section by section.

A genuine adversarial pass, not a single blended reaction — see exactly where the case is strongest and weakest.

04

Get the concrete counter for each section.

A specific document or fact that would resolve each objection — actionable today, not vague advice.

ADVERSARIAL PASS — EDUCATIONAL, NOT FILED

Start your trial

Argue against yourself before an officer does.

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Devil's Advocate — Merito