Writrun is built by a small team of researchers from the payments and AI industries. We've helped businesses recover hundreds of millions in direct, attributable value — and now we're bringing that same discipline to creditor's-rights.
Before Writrun, we built systems that identified hidden revenue for payment processors, recovered disputed funds for e-commerce platforms, and surfaced compliance gaps that turned into eight-figure settlements. The pattern was always the same: dig into public data that everyone has access to but nobody synthesizes, and present it in a form that lets people act.
Creditor's-rights felt like a natural fit. The problem is identical: firms sit on dormant judgments because the research cost doesn't justify the potential recovery. But the data is there — property records, UCC filings, business registrations, federal contracts — waiting for someone to assemble it into a defensible posture.
We're a small team by design. We sell one product to one kind of customer, and we plan to be very good at it before we sell anything else.
We didn't build Writrun in a vacuum. A handful of creditor's-rights firms have been working with us since before we had a public website — sharing their dormant judgment files, stress-testing our reports against what their paralegals would have found, and telling us where we were wrong.
That feedback loop is the reason our reports cite every source, flag exemptions by statute, and stay on the right side of GLBA. The firms that helped us build this aren't named here — we don't publish client lists — but they're the reason the product works.
If you want to see what a report looks like on your own files, we can do that. That's what the exploration period is for.
Most creditor's-rights firms know intuitively that a large share of the judgments on their books are economically dead. Without a defensible asset picture, the firm pays paralegal hours to figure out which ones — or it doesn't, and the firm loses money chasing the wrong ones.
The counties that matter most for collection volume — across the Sun Belt and East Coast — now have queryable property and clerk records online. The infrastructure to assemble a public-records-only report no longer requires a courthouse runner.
A model that can take fifty pages of public-records output and write a paragraph that an attorney will sign their name next to is a recent development. Writrun pairs that synthesis with hard-coded exemption logic and an output linter so the editorial layer adds clarity without inventing facts.