AI Revolutionizes Camp Lejeune Justice Act Claims, Slashing Costs and Boosting Efficiency
May 31, 2026
A new AI-driven framework, Sublime AI Law Mastery, claims to clear the Camp Lejeune Justice Act backlog by integrating AI systems—AI-119 Vulcan, AI Legal Mate, ACTi Athena—and advanced legal workflows to process large volumes of veterans' claims.
A Veterans First for America press release dated May 31, 2026 announces this hybrid AI framework, combining AI-119 Vulcan QAIA, AI Legal Mate, and ACTi Athena (Athena) to tackle the CLJA backlog.
The hybrid system reportedly processes Camp Lejeune and related PACT Act claims at scale, using a combination of AI tools including Holmes for brief analysis and negotiation modeling.
The piece notes a legal disclaimer and distribution via Globe Newswire, with links and a note that markets teams were not involved in the post.
Projected performance includes processing a claim file in about 3.2 minutes, reducing per-claim administrative costs from roughly $3,500 to around $40, and achieving over $1.5 billion in savings with a 99.7% automated compliance rate.
Projected cost reductions are highlighted as cutting per-claim costs to about $40 and bringing total class expenditure to under $20 million, with nearly all claims processed automatically.
Efficiency gains are framed around rapid file processing, low error rates, and substantial overall savings tied to automated adjudication.
The approach uses an Ingest Refinery backend and a Strategic Front-End litigation module, emphasizing fast data extraction from military and health records, strong quality control, and adversarial settlement guidance.
The piece frames the development as a milestone—a paradigm shift in speed, accuracy, and cost-efficiency for mass claims processing in federal courts.
The architecture envisions interfacing with a Debtor-in-Possession Peterson’s Chapter 11 estate assets and a settlement pool of more than 440,000 CLJA claimants valued in the tens of billions, with funding and process provisions under 11 U.S.C. sections and FRBP rules.
Proposed remedies include appointing an independent private trustee under 11 U.S.C. §1104 and funding via §364, with automated pleadings under FRBP 7001 and interpleader actions under FRBP 7022.
The system is described as targeting a settlement pool exceeding $44.4 billion for over 440,000 claimants tied to the Navy JAG Claims Unit and CLJA assets.
Summary based on 4 sources