Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== What is LexisNexis? The Ultimate Guide for Consumers, Students, and Professionals ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation, especially when dealing with consumer reports or background checks. ===== What is LexisNexis? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine a super-library combined with the world's most powerful private investigator, all digitized and instantly searchable. That, in essence, is LexisNexis. For lawyers and law students, it's a vast digital law library containing nearly every case, statute, and legal article ever written. For businesses and insurance companies, it's a powerful risk-assessment tool, a massive database of public and private records used for everything from background checks to calculating insurance premiums. For the average person, LexisNexis is often an invisible force, a "data broker" that collects your digital footprint—from property records to traffic tickets—and sells that information. Understanding LexisNexis is crucial because it's not just a tool for professionals; it's a system that likely has a file on you, impacting your ability to get a job, an apartment, or an insurance policy. This guide will demystify LexisNexis, showing you how it works, how it affects you, and how you can take control of your information. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **A Two-Sided Coin:** **LexisNexis** is both a premier [[legal_research]] platform used by legal professionals to access [[case_law]] and statutes, and a massive [[data_broker]] that compiles and sells personal information for background checks and risk analysis. * **It Affects You Directly:** Your personal data is almost certainly in a **LexisNexis** database, used by insurance companies, employers, and landlords to make decisions about you, often without your direct knowledge. * **You Have Rights:** Under federal laws like the [[fair_credit_reporting_act]], you have the right to see the information **LexisNexis** has collected on you, dispute any inaccuracies, and in some cases, place security freezes on your consumer reports. ===== Part 1: The Foundations of a Data Giant ===== ==== The Story of LexisNexis: A Historical Journey ==== LexisNexis wasn't born in Silicon Valley; its roots are in Dayton, Ohio. In the late 1960s, the Ohio State Bar Association sought a way to modernize legal research, which for centuries had involved manually searching through endless volumes of leather-bound books. They pioneered a project to create a full-text, searchable electronic database of Ohio law. This project, which became operational in 1973, was called LEXIS (an acronym for Lex Information Service). It was a revolution, allowing a lawyer to find a relevant case in minutes instead of days. The "Nexis" part of the name came later. In 1979, the company launched NEXIS, a parallel database containing full-text articles from major news sources like The New York Times and The Washington Post. This broadened the company's appeal beyond law firms to journalists, corporations, and researchers. The two services were a powerful combination. A lawyer researching a corporate merger could use LEXIS to find relevant securities law and then pivot to NEXIS to find news articles about the companies involved. The company, officially becoming LexisNexis, was acquired by the Anglo-Dutch publishing giant Reed Elsevier (now RELX Group) in 1994. This acquisition supercharged its growth, allowing it to acquire dozens of smaller data companies and expand its "Risk Solutions" division, which now represents a massive portion of its business and is the primary way the company interacts with the data of ordinary citizens. ==== The Products on the Shelf: What LexisNexis Actually Sells ==== LexisNexis is not a single product but a suite of powerful services tailored to different industries. * **Lexis+ (and Lexis Advance):** This is the flagship product for legal professionals. It's the modern version of the original LEXIS database. Lawyers, judges, and law students use it to research statutes, regulations, and case law. Its most famous feature is Shepard's Citations Service, which helps a lawyer determine if a case is still "good law" or has been overturned by a later court decision. * **Nexis:** The news and business intelligence arm. Journalists use it to search archives of thousands of global news sources. Corporations use it for competitive analysis, brand monitoring, and [[due_diligence]] on potential partners. * **LexisNexis Risk Solutions:** This is the division that most directly impacts the average person. It provides data and analytics to businesses to help them manage risk. This includes: * **Identity Verification:** Helping banks and online services confirm you are who you say you are. * **Fraud Prevention:** Analyzing transaction patterns to detect and prevent financial fraud. * **Background Screening:** Providing pre-employment background checks for companies. * **Insurance Data:** Supplying insurance companies with data for underwriting and claims processing, including the C.L.U.E. (Comprehensive Loss Underwriting Exchange) report, which tracks your auto and property insurance claim history. ==== A Market of Titans: LexisNexis vs. The Competition ==== The high-end legal research market is largely a duopoly. LexisNexis's primary competitor is Westlaw, owned by Thomson Reuters. For decades, law students and lawyers have debated which is better, much like a rivalry between Coke and Pepsi. In recent years, lower-cost alternatives have emerged, challenging the dominance of the big two. ^ **Feature** ^ **LexisNexis (Lexis+)** ^ **Westlaw (Thomson Reuters)** ^ **Fastcase / Casetext** ^ | **Primary Audience** | Law Firms, Government, Academia | Law Firms, Government, Academia | Small Firms, Solo Practitioners | | **Key Differentiator** | **Shepard's Citations:** The gold standard for verifying case law validity. | **KeyCite & West Key Number System:** A powerful proprietary legal topic indexing system. | **Price Point & AI:** Significantly lower cost and innovative AI search tools (e.g., CoCounsel). | | **Core Strength** | Extensive collection of secondary sources (treatises, journals) and powerful search algorithms. | Unparalleled editorial enhancements and the structured Key Number System for topic-based research. | Accessibility and disruptive technology, making legal research more affordable. | | **What this means for you:** | If you're a lawyer at a big firm, you'll likely use LexisNexis. If you're a solo practitioner, you might choose a more affordable option. For consumers, the brand name on the legal research tool doesn't matter as much as understanding that these companies' "Risk Solutions" arms are handling your data. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing LexisNexis Services ===== ==== The Anatomy of Legal Research: Key Components Explained ==== To understand why lawyers pay thousands of dollars a year for LexisNexis, you need to understand the tools inside the platform. === Feature: Case Law Database === This is the heart of the system. LexisNexis contains millions of court opinions from federal courts (including the [[supreme_court_of_the_united_states]]), all 50 state courts, and various specialty courts. A lawyer can search for cases using keywords, party names, judges, or complex Boolean search strings. * **Relatable Example:** Imagine a small business owner is sued by a customer who slipped and fell. Their lawyer could use LexisNexis to instantly find every "slip and fall" case decided in their state in the last 20 years, helping them understand how courts typically rule in these situations and build a stronger defense. === Feature: Shepard's Citations Service === This is arguably LexisNexis's most famous and valuable tool. In law, knowing what a court said in the past is only half the battle; you must know if that ruling is still valid today. A later court could have overturned, criticized, or limited the original case. Shepard's provides this critical validation. * **The Analogy:** Think of it like a product recall system for legal cases. Before you rely on a 20-year-old car seat, you'd check if it has been recalled for safety defects. Before a lawyer relies on a 20-year-old court case, they **must** "Shepardize" it to see if it has been "recalled" by a higher court. * **How it looks:** LexisNexis uses simple color-coded signals: * **Red Stop Sign:** Warning! The case has been overturned or reversed on at least one point of law. * **Orange 'Q':** Questioned. The case's validity has been criticized by another court. * **Yellow Triangle:** Caution. The case has been limited or treated negatively in some way. * **Green Diamond:** Positive Treatment. The case has been followed or affirmed by other courts. === Feature: Statutes and Regulations === Laws aren't just made by judges; they're passed by legislatures (statutes) and implemented by government agencies (regulations). LexisNexis contains the complete, updated United States Code, all 50 state codes, and a vast library of federal and state regulations. Crucially, it provides annotated versions, which link the text of the law to court cases that have interpreted it. === Feature: Secondary Sources === These are materials *about* the law, rather than the law itself. They include legal encyclopedias, scholarly articles from law reviews, and in-depth books called "treatises" written by top experts. These sources help lawyers understand complex areas of law and find leading cases on a topic. ==== The Players on the Field: Who Uses LexisNexis? ==== * **Lawyers and Law Firms:** The primary users. They rely on it for litigation research, contract drafting, and advising clients. For them, it's as essential as a hammer is to a carpenter. * **Judges and Court Staff:** Judges use LexisNexis to research the precedents cited in lawyers' briefs and to ensure their own opinions are well-supported by existing law. * **Law Students:** Learning to use LexisNexis and Westlaw is a fundamental part of modern legal education. These companies provide heavily discounted access to law schools to build brand loyalty with future lawyers. * **Government Agencies:** From the [[department_of_justice]] to the [[securities_and_exchange_commission]], government lawyers and investigators use LexisNexis for enforcement actions and policy making. * **Journalists and Academics:** Researchers use the Nexis database to search news archives and scholarly articles for their work. * **Corporations (and their Insurers):** This is the "Risk Solutions" side. They use LexisNexis not for legal research, but to access massive data pools for background checks on potential employees, fraud detection, and insurance underwriting. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook: How LexisNexis Affects You ===== For most non-lawyers, the most important interaction with LexisNexis involves the vast amounts of personal data collected by its Risk Solutions division. This data is compiled into consumer reports that can affect your life in profound ways. Here's what to do. ==== Step-by-Step: Managing Your LexisNexis Data ==== === Step 1: Understand What Information They Have === LexisNexis is a [[data_broker]] and a Consumer Reporting Agency (CRA) under the [[fair_credit_reporting_act]]. This means they collect and maintain records on individuals from thousands of sources. This can include: * Real estate transaction and ownership records. * Court records (bankruptcies, judgments, liens, criminal records). * Professional license information. * Historical addresses. * Insurance claim history (the C.L.U.E. report). * Motor vehicle records (accidents, tickets). A company may pull this information when you apply for a job, rent an apartment, or get an insurance quote. An error in this report could cause you to be denied. === Step 2: Request Your Free Consumer Disclosure Report === Just as you can get a free credit report, the FCRA gives you the right to request a free copy of your "Full File Disclosure" from LexisNexis Risk Solutions. This is your chance to see what they see. - **How to Request:** You must request it directly from them. The easiest way is to visit the LexisNexis Risk Solutions "Consumer Center" website. They provide options to submit a request online, by phone, or by mail. - **Be Prepared:** You will need to provide personally identifying information to verify your identity, such as your full name, address, date of birth, and Social Security number. === Step 3: Carefully Review Your Report for Errors === When you receive your report (it can be over 100 pages long), review it meticulously. Look for common errors: * **Mismatched Identities:** Information belonging to someone else with a similar name. * **Outdated Information:** A lien that was paid off but is still listed as active. * **Incorrect Criminal History:** Expunged records that are still appearing, or worse, crimes you never committed. * **Inaccurate Insurance Claims:** Claims attributed to you that belong to a previous homeowner or another driver. === Step 4: Dispute Any Inaccuracies Immediately === If you find an error, you have the right to dispute it. - **The Process:** LexisNexis is legally obligated to provide a clear process for filing a dispute, which is typically outlined on their consumer portal or in the report itself. You should submit your dispute in writing. - **Be Specific:** Clearly state which item(s) you believe are inaccurate. Provide any documentation you have to support your claim (e.g., a court document showing a record was expunged, a letter from an insurer). - **The Investigation:** Under the FCRA, LexisNexis generally has 30 days to investigate your dispute. They will contact the original source of the information to verify it. Once the investigation is complete, they must notify you of the results and provide you with a free copy of your corrected report if a change was made. ==== Essential Paperwork: Your Right to Know ==== * **LexisNexis Full File Disclosure Request:** This is the formal request for your consumer report. You can find the portal to initiate this on the LexisNexis Risk Solutions website under their consumer section. * **FCRA Dispute Form/Letter:** While they may have an online portal, it's often wise to send a formal dispute letter via certified mail. This letter should clearly identify you, state the specific information you are disputing, explain why it is incorrect, and include copies (never originals) of any supporting documents. ===== Part 4: The Impact of Big Data on the Law ===== While no single "landmark case" created LexisNexis, its existence at the center of the big data revolution has placed it at the heart of modern legal battles over privacy and accuracy. ==== Case Study: Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins (2016) ==== * **The Backstory:** Thomas Robins discovered that his profile on the "people search" website Spokeo contained inaccurate information. It listed him as wealthy, holding a graduate degree, and married with children—none of which was true. He worried this false information could harm his job prospects. * **The Legal Question:** Robins sued Spokeo for a "willful" violation of the [[fair_credit_reporting_act]]. The core question before the [[supreme_court_of_the_united_states]] was whether simply having inaccurate information published about you was enough of an "injury" to give you standing to sue in federal court, even if you couldn't prove specific financial harm. * **The Court's Holding:** The Court held that a plaintiff must show a "concrete" injury, not just a bare procedural violation of the statute. However, it clarified that "concrete" does not necessarily mean "tangible" or financial. The risk of future harm could be enough. They sent the case back to the lower court to reconsider whether Robins's specific situation met this standard. * **How It Impacts You Today:** This case is central to the entire data broker industry, including LexisNexis. It highlights the legal fight over the real-world harm caused by inaccurate data. While it made it slightly harder to sue over trivial inaccuracies, it affirmed that inaccurate data that poses a real risk of harm (like falsely reporting a criminal record) is a basis for a lawsuit. It underscores the importance of checking your LexisNexis report and disputing errors, as the law recognizes that such errors can cause you real, legally-recognized harm. ===== Part 5: The Future of LexisNexis ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== LexisNexis and companies like it are at the epicenter of several critical modern debates: * **Data Privacy:** As data collection becomes more pervasive, there is a growing public and legislative push for greater consumer privacy rights. Laws like the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) give consumers more control over their data, creating compliance challenges and ethical questions for data brokers. * **Algorithmic Bias:** The "risk scores" and analytical products that LexisNexis sells are built on algorithms. There are serious concerns that these algorithms, if trained on biased historical data, could perpetuate and even amplify discrimination in hiring, housing, and insurance against protected groups. * **Government Surveillance:** LexisNexis holds contracts with numerous government agencies, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). This has drawn criticism from civil liberties groups who argue that the company is facilitating government surveillance by providing access to vast databases of personal information without a [[warrant]]. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== The future of LexisNexis will be defined by one thing: **Artificial Intelligence**. * **Generative AI:** LexisNexis has already launched "Lexis+ AI," a tool that uses generative AI to answer legal questions, summarize cases, and even draft legal documents. This technology has the potential to revolutionize the practice of law, making legal services more efficient but also raising profound questions about accuracy, ethics, and the role of the human lawyer. * **Predictive Analytics:** Beyond just finding the law, companies are moving towards predicting legal outcomes. By analyzing millions of past cases, AI tools may soon be able to predict how a specific judge is likely to rule on a motion or what the likely settlement value of a case is. This could change everything from legal strategy to business negotiations. * **The Data Arms Race:** The value of LexisNexis is its data. As new sources of data emerge—from social media to the Internet of Things—the company will be in a constant race to acquire and integrate this information, further blurring the lines between our public and private lives and setting the stage for the next generation of legal and ethical battles. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[case_law]]:** The body of law created by judges through written decisions in court cases. * **[[data_broker]]:** A company that collects personal information about consumers and sells that data to other organizations. * **[[due_diligence]]:** The research and investigation performed by a party before entering into an agreement or contract. * **[[fair_credit_reporting_act]]:** A federal law that regulates the collection of consumers' credit information and access to their consumer reports. * **[[legal_research]]:** The process of identifying and retrieving information necessary to support legal decision-making. * **[[precedent]]:** A previous court decision that is regarded as a rule or guide for deciding subsequent similar cases. * **[[public_records]]:** Documents or pieces of information that are not considered confidential and are stored by a government agency. * **Shepardize:** The process of using the Shepard's Citations Service to check the validity of a legal authority. * **[[statute]]:** A written law passed by a legislative body, such as Congress or a state legislature. * **[[statute_of_limitations]]:** A law that sets the maximum time after an event within which legal proceedings may be initiated. * **Thomson Reuters:** The parent company of Westlaw, the main competitor to LexisNexis. * **Westlaw:** A major online legal research service for lawyers and legal professionals. ===== See Also ===== * [[fair_credit_reporting_act]] * [[background_checks]] * [[data_privacy]] * [[legal_research]] * [[supreme_court_of_the_united_states]] * [[case_law]] * [[civil_procedure]]