GenAI applications in global investigations: Closing gaps in traditional methods
Shifting from manual reviews to AI-driven insights
October 28, 2025
GenAI applications in global investigations: Closing gaps in traditional methodsShifting from manual reviews to AI-driven insightsOctober 28, 2025 Why should I read this?GenAI is redefining approaches to investigations. Its impact spans internal reviews, competition law investigations, public inquiries, data breach responses, confidential investigations, cybersecurity incidents and whistleblower cases, to name a few. It can process massive data sets with precision, cut review times dramatically and uncover hidden risks, even in complex cross-border cases. It outperforms traditional tools such as Technology Assisted Review (TAR). Unlike TAR (which relies on predictive coding, extensive set-up and manual intervention), GenAI is quick in its analysis, including identifying key documents, uncovering coded conversations and building detailed timelines of key dates. By integrating GenAI, investigations shift from reactive document reviews to proactive risk management. For businesses under regulatory scrutiny and dealing with complex, cross-border data, GenAI may offer quicker answers, lower costs and more consistent findings. It also allows a more strategic approach to be taken at the outset, allowing clients to be on the front foot and engage with a regulator’s concerns at a much earlier stage. How to use GenAI as part of the investigation process
Final thoughts on using GenAI in global investigationsGenAI fills gaps left by legacy tools. It also supports forensic analysis, extracting and explaining suspicious behaviour (whether that behaviour relates to market coordination, governance failures or other forms of misconduct) while summarizing documents clearly. Regulators often have their own dedicated forensic IT teams with sophisticated software to interrogate data quickly; GenAI helps businesses to match or even exceed that standard. But speed and scale don’t replace quality checks. Outputs need validation to avoid errors, particularly in sensitive areas such as privilege or cultural nuances. Ethical use is important: ensure transparency and follow global data privacy laws (such as GDPR or Asia-Pacific restrictions). To maintain trust and efficiency in your investigations process, start small with pilot projects, train teams on GenAI’s limitations, iterate based on results and combine it with human review. Latest Insights
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