Where the record proves the process
— or proves it didn't happen.
SUFFICIENT
Records Engineering and FOI Litigation Support
Methodology in practice since 1996
Lawful decisions generate records.
Missing records are evidence.
For Legal Firms Only.
Built From Three Decades of Pressure-Testing Public Process
For three decades, our work surfaced the records that institutions did not want surfaced — across municipalities, school districts, and state agencies. The same methodology that produced policy reversals, statutory rewrites, and accountability filings now operates in support of counsel.
We know where the records are because we have requested them.
Sufficient to Show™
Records Engineering for Litigation Grade FOI Work
Sufficient to Show is a records engineering vendor for law firms handling FOI, civil rights, education, and government accountability matters.
We design and execute public records work product that supports litigation, investigations, and fee recovery.
We are not a records vendor. We engineer leverage using public records law.
The Problem
Public records work is high-leverage — and routinely mishandled in ways that cost firms real ground.
- Overbroad requests trigger delay, fees, and exemption claims
- Poor framing invites "no records" responses that go unchallenged
- Incomplete documentation weakens fee petitions and litigation posture
- Strategic records — the ones that actually move a matter — are routinely missed because the request was not engineered to find them
Most firms face the same internal constraint:
- Associates are too expensive for iterative records work
- Paralegals lack decision-node methodology
- Outsourcing vendors produce documents, not leverage
The result is predictable: firms either absorb the cost, under-resource the work, or surrender strategic advantage.
What We Do
We engineer public records work product designed to hold up under scrutiny.
1. Request Engineering
Decision-node analysis. Constraint-based drafting. Jurisdiction-specific calibration.
Every request is structured to force a meaningful response: production, denial, or admission.
2. Response Analysis
Production review. Denial diagnostics. Exemption stress-testing.
We map what was produced against what must exist — and identify the gap.
3. Strategic Escalation Support
Administrative appeals. Fee posture documentation. Litigation-ready record assembly.
All work is designed to be defensible if attached as an exhibit.
The Method
Our work is grounded in a simple principle:
Lawful decisions generate records. If those records do not exist, that absence is evidence.
We apply a constraint-based approach:
- Start with a specific government decision
- Infer the mandatory paper trail
- Request records sufficient to show how the process occurred
This framing does two things:
- Forces production of decision-critical records
- Converts "no records" into a documented claim about process
A "no records" response is not failure. It is a position that can be tested, escalated, or used to support fee recovery.
Who We Work With
- Media and First Amendment firms
- Civil rights and civil liberties practices
- Education law practices
- Government accountability litigators
- Advocacy organizations with in-house counsel
We work as a vendor to licensed counsel. We do not engage directly with individual requesters.
Engagement Models
Per-Matter
Defined scope. Fixed or capped fee.
Retainer
Ongoing FOI infrastructure for firms with continuous needs.
Litigation Support
Discovery-adjacent records work. Escalation support. Record assembly.
Rapid Response
24–48 hour turnaround for time-sensitive filings, where the paper trail is still being generated and timing determines what survives.
All engagements are confidential. Work product produced in support of litigation is structured to qualify for attorney work product treatment under the direction of counsel.
Jurisdictional Coverage
Deepest fluency in Florida (Chapter 119 — statutory expert).
Working command across major media-state jurisdictions, including New York, California, Texas, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and the District of Columbia.
State-specific calibration available in all U.S. jurisdictions, with local-counsel coordination where residency or standing requirements apply.
About
Sufficient to Show is the litigation-support arm of three decades of applied public records work.
- CLE faculty, public records and First Amendment practice
- Author, FOI Request Engineering Playbook; Librarian Edition, released into the public domain
- Three decades of applied public records advocacy across municipal, school district, and state-agency matters
- Named in the legislative record of Florida's 2024 book-ban statute revision as the practitioner whose filings prompted the rewrite
- Pro Se Plaintiff, Stevens v. LaMarca (S.D. Fla.) — public accountability litigation
The methodology has been applied across jurisdictions to produce documented policy failures, administrative reversals, litigation-ready records, and fee recovery posture.
What We Don't Do
- We do not represent clients or end users
- We do not provide legal advice
- We do not appear in proceedings
- We do not substitute for counsel
- We do not submit requests under false identities
- We do not design requests to obscure unlawful conduct
We support counsel. We do not replace it.
Request a Discovery Call
Submit the intake below and we will respond within one business day. Matters on a 72-hour timeline receive a response within two business hours.
FAQs
1. What is Sufficient to Show?
A records engineering vendor for law firms. We design, file, and analyze public records requests as work product in support of litigation, investigations, and accountability matters. We work as a vendor to licensed counsel — the lawyer is our client; the lawyer's client is never ours.
2. How is this different from a paralegal service or a records-retrieval vendor?
Records vendors deliver documents. We deliver leverage. Every request is engineered against a specific decision node — we identify what records must exist if the underlying process was lawful, draft to force a meaningful response, and treat "no records" as a documented finding rather than a dead end. The work product is structured to be defensible if attached as an exhibit.
3. Are you a law firm? Do you give legal advice?
No to both. Sufficient to Show is not a law firm and does not provide legal services. All work is performed in support of licensed counsel. We do not advise end users, appear in proceedings, or substitute for the attorneys we work with.
4. What types of matters do you support?
FOI litigation, civil rights and First Amendment cases, education law (book challenges, Title IX, IDEA records), government accountability investigations, records-driven investigative journalism, and fee-recovery posture work in any matter where strategic records production matters. If your case turns on what an institution can or cannot document about its own decisions, we are useful.
5. What jurisdictions do you cover?
Deepest fluency in Florida (Chapter 119). Working command across major media-state jurisdictions including New York, California, Texas, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and the District of Columbia. State-specific calibration available in all U.S. jurisdictions, with local-counsel coordination where residency or standing requirements apply.
6. How fast can you turn around a request?
Standard engagements scope on a per-matter basis. For time-sensitive filings — typically within the 24–48 hour window where the paper trail is still being generated and timing determines what survives — we offer a Rapid Response engagement model. The first 48 hours after a triggering event are when the records are most preservable; we are built for that window.
7. How are engagements structured?
Four models: per-matter (defined scope, fixed or capped fee), retainer (ongoing FOI infrastructure for firms with continuous needs), litigation support (discovery-adjacent records work, escalation, and record assembly), and rapid response (24–48 hour turnaround). Pricing is matter-dependent and quoted after intake.
8. Is your work product confidential and privileged?
All engagements are confidential. Work product produced at the direction of counsel in anticipation of or during litigation is structured to qualify for attorney work product treatment under Rule 26(b)(3) and analogous state rules. We coordinate with engaging counsel on document handling, retention, and privilege protocols at the start of every matter.
9. Will you file a request under our firm's name, the client's name, or your own?
The choice of requester is a strategic decision, not a clerical one. Each option has different signaling, procedural, and downstream consequences. We work through the choice with engaging counsel during the discovery call.
Filing under the firm's name is appropriate when fee-recovery posture or litigation-hold implications favor a clear paper trail tying records to the matter. It also signals legal interest, which can accelerate agency legal review — sometimes a feature, sometimes a bug.
Filing under the client's name fits where the client is the natural real party in interest — a journalist, an advocacy organization, an individual with statutory standing. It avoids law-firm-requester signaling and aligns cleanly with statutes that prefer the real party in interest.
Filing under our name is the default for pre-litigation fact development, matters where signaling intent prematurely would compromise strategy, or coordinated multi-jurisdiction filings that benefit from a consistent vendor-of-record. It is most useful when the agency on the other side of the request has reason to behave differently if it knows your firm is involved.
In jurisdictions with residency or real-party-in-interest requirements, we structure filings to comply — including local-counsel coordination where the matter requires it. We do not file under fabricated identities and we do not design requests to obscure unlawful conduct. The choice of requester is documented in the engagement letter and aligned with the matter's strategic posture.
10. Who is behind this?
Sufficient to Show is the litigation-support arm of three decades of applied public records work by Chaz Stevens — CLE faculty in public records and First Amendment practice, author of the FOI Request Engineering Playbook, and the practitioner whose filings prompted Florida's 2024 book-ban statute revision. Active plaintiff in Stevens v. LaMarca (S.D. Fla.). The methodology has been applied across municipal, school district, and state-agency matters to produce documented policy failures, administrative reversals, and litigation-ready records.








