UK law firm Burges Salmon has extended its use of AI intelligence provider Wexler firm wide, having adopted it in 2024 within its dispute resolution team.
Wexler is now a reliable option for the firm’s teams to handle complex, document-heavy matters, supporting fact extraction, chronology production, and early case assessment.
In complex litigation, clarity on what happened and where evidence may conflict is key. By extracting sourced, cited facts from vast unstructured datasets, Burges Salmon says that Wexler has reduced the manual burden of factual review and enabled lawyers to build compelling narratives that stand up to scrutiny.
Wexler enables lawyers to find critical vulnerabilities in discovery and draft documents, with the capacity to process up to 250,000 documents per upload.
Tom Whittaker, director, head of AI (advisory) at Burges Salmon, says: “Wexler has become a reliable option for how our teams approach document-heavy work. It allows us to engage with the evidential record more efficiently and focus on the facts that matter earlier in a case. We are pleased to be extending our use of the platform across the firm.”
Burges Salmon recently announced the next phase of its Digital Enablement Programme (DEP), a multi-year initiative to modernise how the firm delivers legal services and reflects the firm’s broader commitment to deploying purpose-built AI for complex legal work.
Wexler has been adopted by major global law firms, including Clifford Chance, Addleshaw Goddard, and HSF Kramer, and raised $5.3 million in seed funding in 2025.










