HMCTS delivers easy-to-use will and probate search service with Iron Mountain InSight on AWS
Read in our case study how Iron Mountain helped HMCTS storing, digitising and processing wills with Iron Mountain InSight and Amazon Textract ML.
Challenge
Solution
Iron Mountain InSight uses Amazon Textract ML to read, process and sort wills, extracting content accurately from typed and handwritten text.
Results
Along with a transformed website, HMCTS can deliver better, faster outcomes for probate users, genealogists, solicitors, and the public.
Constant quest for service innovation
Preserving legal documents dating back to 1858
Over 41 million records and growing
Under UK law wills must be kept in perpetuity and made available to anyone who wants to see them. That could be for an individual or solicitor involved with probate, a genealogist or relative researching a family tree, or those curious about the last wishes of popular figures like Charles Dickens, Sir Winston Churchill, and Lady Diana.
In England and Wales, the responsibility to securely store and provide access to these legal documents falls to the Probate Service, which is part of HM Courts and Tribunals Service (HMCTS). “The archive dates back to 1858,” explains Stephen Burgess, Family Probate Jurisdictional and Operational Support Manager at HMCTS. “It comprises over 41 million probate records and is growing by around 250,000 wills each year.”
Always looking to improve
Proud to partner HMCTS for over two decades, Iron Mountain created the Probate Records Centre, a purpose-built facility in Birmingham to centralise and standardise records management. As well as storage, the service includes the retrieval and fulfilment of copy documents for orders placed via the Probate Service website.
Between 1858 and 1972 every Probate Registry maintained a calendar in book form (known as the Ledger, in which grants of Probate were recorded). Over the years, Iron Mountain scanning specialists digitised some of those records, but many remained in fragile paper form.
To digitise the Ledger, Iron Mountain’s solution would look at surnames in the top right-hand corner of the page and scan and capture those details as metadata. That meant search results might contain a list of names, which website users would then have to physically trawl through for the correct will. Users would then place the will retrieval order. While this system was effective, there was plenty of scope for improvement.
“We’re always keen to learn about emerging technologies and Iron Mountain are very good at coming to us with interesting ideas,” says Burgess. “So, we wanted to hear more about their Iron Mountain InSight platform and how it could be applied to our online wills service to improve efficiency and furnish a better user experience.”
Employing advanced techniques like machine learning and artificial intelligence
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