# Matrix Reprogrammed Claim Classifier

Updated: 2026-06-27T18:58:21.639Z

Rule: Source first. Evidence class second. Claim strength third. Network interpretation last.

## Evidence Badges

### Court Record

- Strength: High
- What it proves: A filing, order, docket, exhibit, testimony transcript, judgment, plea, or court-managed document exists.
- What it does not prove: It does not automatically prove every allegation inside the filing unless the court found it, the party admitted it, or the record independently supports it.
- What strengthens it: Ruling, exhibit, sworn transcript, plea, verdict, authenticated docket entry.

### Official Source

- Strength: High
- What it proves: A government, regulator, court, agency, committee, or official dataset published the material.
- What it does not prove: It may still need context, date, definitions, limitations, redactions, and category separation.
- What strengthens it: Original publication page, dataset notes, definitions, release memo, archive capture.

### Declassified Archive

- Strength: Medium / High
- What it proves: A released file, FOIA record, archive item, or historical government document exists.
- What it does not prove: It does not automatically prove present-day claims or the full surrounding context.
- What strengthens it: File date, agency origin, release package, related files, independent corroboration.

### Email / Message Record

- Strength: Medium / High
- What it proves: A correspondence record, message thread, sender/recipient/date/context trail, or archive result exists.
- What it does not prove: It does not automatically prove the truth of statements made inside the message.
- What strengthens it: Authenticated archive, full thread, metadata, attachments, matching public records.

### Flight / Log / Contact Record

- Strength: Medium
- What it proves: A name, trip, contact, phone-book entry, schedule, log, or proximity record exists.
- What it does not prove: It does not prove criminal conduct, knowledge, intent, or participation by itself.
- What strengthens it: Multiple records, testimony, date alignment, corroborating emails, court exhibits.

### Sworn Claim

- Strength: Medium
- What it proves: A person made a claim under oath or in a legal setting.
- What it does not prove: A sworn claim is not the same as a court finding or conviction.
- What strengthens it: Corroborating documents, cross-examination, court acceptance, supporting exhibits.

### Settlement / NDA

- Strength: Medium
- What it proves: A private legal resolution, silence agreement, or civil compromise exists or is credibly reported.
- What it does not prove: It is not an admission unless the settlement says it is.
- What strengthens it: Settlement text, court filings, party statements, payment terms, related testimony.

### Financial / Access Record

- Strength: Medium
- What it proves: Money, payments, donations, employment, advisory access, institutional access, or financial proximity exists.
- What it does not prove: Money or access is not automatic proof of sex-crime participation or operational knowledge.
- What strengthens it: Invoices, bank records, filings, internal reviews, testimony, contemporaneous correspondence.

### Credible Reporting / News Lead

- Strength: Lead
- What it proves: A reputable outlet has reported a claim, source trail, legal update, or document lead.
- What it does not prove: Reporting is a lead unless backed by primary documents, direct evidence, or court findings.
- What strengthens it: Primary records, multiple independent outlets, linked documents, named on-record sources.

### Interpretive / Symbolic Claim

- Strength: Interpretation
- What it proves: An interpretation, pattern, symbolic reading, or analytical argument has been made.
- What it does not prove: It does not prove criminal conduct or conspiracy by itself.
- What strengthens it: Primary text, historical source, doctrinal source, direct admission, external corroboration.

### Speculation Quarantine

- Strength: Quarantined
- What it proves: A hypothesis exists but does not yet have enough evidence to publish as a claim.
- What it does not prove: It proves nothing beyond a research lead.
- What strengthens it: Primary records, named sources, court documents, official releases, authenticated archives.

### Unsupported / Rejected

- Strength: Rejected
- What it proves: The claim lacks sufficient sourcing or violates the site evidence boundary.
- What it does not prove: It should not be promoted as fact.
- What strengthens it: A real public source trail before publication.


## Claim Rules

- Association is not guilt.
- A name in a record is not proof of wrongdoing.
- A symbol is not proof of conspiracy.
- An adverse-event report is not proof of causation.
- A relationship line must say what it means.
- Unsupported viral claims are quarantined or rejected.
- Victim privacy overrides spectacle.
- Corrections strengthen the archive.
