State and vertical

Criminal defense software for Wisconsin practitioners.

Legal Core is focused on Wisconsin criminal defense work: court calendars, discovery and motion context, sealed or expunged record handling, e-filing scoping, and migration from general legal practice systems.

Quick answer

Legal Core in Wisconsin

Legal Core is Butler's criminal defense software for Wisconsin criminal defense practices. The page applies the locked state+vertical pattern to Wisconsin: state court and regulatory context, vertical-specific workflow planning, pricing, migration, FAQs, and public source citations. Pricing follows Butler's uniform structure at $99, $149, $199, or custom by user count, with a 2-month free trial and founding cohort discounts where spots remain. Migration is framed around common incumbent systems such as Clio, MyCase, Smokeball, PracticePanther, Filevine. Legal Core treats Wisconsin-specific rules as workflow context: court filing, deadline, sealed-record, and ethics questions remain attorney-reviewed implementation context. Butler does not claim automatic legal deadline calculation, court filing, license renewal filing, recording-law decisions, or direct court integration on this page.

Legal Core in Wisconsin

Vertical-specific, state-specific, and scoped to what the product actually supports.

Butler is Michigan-based and serves Wisconsin practices remotely; this page does not claim a Butler facility or customer office in Wisconsin.

Wisconsin criminal defense workflows vary by court, county, local rule, and case type, so implementation planning stays practitioner-reviewed.

Legal Core keeps state-specific procedure visible in the matter record without claiming automatic legal analysis or court filing.

Wisconsin regulatory landscape

The state-specific rules that shape the Legal Core evaluation.

Wisconsin criminal defense software has to account for court structure, local rule variation, professional responsibility, e-filing posture, and sensitive record workflows. These cards go deeper than the state hub by narrowing the surface to defense practice operations.

01

Wisconsin criminal courts and calendar context

Wisconsin trial work runs through circuit courts, with appeals through the Court of Appeals and Wisconsin Supreme Court. Defense practices need to track criminal calendars, motions, discovery, bond conditions, sentencing events, and investigator material across county court patterns. Legal Core supports those events as structured workflows. Legal Core treats court events as workflow context for reminders, status review, filing packet preparation, and attorney-supervised deadline tracking.

02

Discovery, speedy-trial, suppression, and dismissal scoping

Wisconsin discovery, speedy-trial, suppression, dismissal, plea, and sentencing issues are configured as attorney-reviewed workflow context. Butler does not calculate legal deadlines or decide procedural rights; implementation scoping identifies which local rule sets and matter templates the practice wants surfaced.

03

E-filing, forms, and local rule variation

Wisconsin courts may use statewide e-filing systems, court-specific portals, local forms, and county-level filing conventions. Legal Core references those requirements as filing packet and checklist context, not as a direct court integration or automatic form generator.

04

Sensitive records and professional responsibility

Wisconsin lawyers evaluating technology remain responsible for competence, confidentiality, supervision, and protected client materials. State bar technology and AI discussions make access control, privileged work product separation, audit trails, and controlled document handling practical evaluation criteria. Legal Core keeps sealed, expunged, nondisclosure, juvenile, and sensitive-record handling visible in the matter workflow while attorney review controls legal decisions.

Workflow specificity

How Legal Core maps to Wisconsin operating work.

Legal Core's Wisconsin workflow framing focuses on criminal defense operations that generic practice management products tend to treat as configurable notes rather than defense-specific work structure.

01

Defense calendar and hearing preparation

Court dates, motion dates, discovery checkpoints, client preparation tasks, and witness or investigator follow-up can be kept in one Wisconsin defense matter workflow. Legal Core does not replace attorney deadline review.

02

Discovery and motion packet context

Wisconsin defense teams can organize discovery requests, received evidence, suppression issues, motion drafts, response tasks, and hearing notes around the matter. State law questions remain legal review items, not automated determinations.

03

Sealed and sensitive matter handling

Legal Core can keep sensitive-record flags, access context, review status, and audit-oriented notes close to the matter record. The page does not claim automatic sealing, expungement, nondisclosure, or court-record eligibility analysis.

04

E-filing and form packet scoping

Wisconsin e-filing, form, and local rule requirements can be represented as checklist and packet context. Butler does not claim direct filing into court systems unless that integration is separately verified.

05

Parallel migration review

Wisconsin firms moving from Clio, MyCase, Smokeball, PracticePanther, Filevine can use the Legal Core trial period for a parallel run. Imported matters, contacts, calendars, documents, notes, and billing records are reviewed before primary operations move.

City-level Legal Core

Wisconsin cities with Legal Core pages.

These city+vertical pages add county court, local bar, custody, licensing, and implementation-scope context beneath this state+vertical page.

Milwaukee

Legal Core coverage for Milwaukee County practitioners, with city-specific authority and workflow context layered under theWisconsin page.

Review Milwaukee Legal Core

Pricing and programs

Uniform pricing, vertical-specific evaluation.

Legal Core uses Butler's uniform pricing structure: Starter at $99 per user per month, Small Team at $149 per user per month, Firm at $199 per user per month, and custom pricing above 25 users. Legal Core includes a 2-month free trial. Each product has a founding cohort with 100 spots and 25% off for 2 years, plus an application-based design partner program with 10 spots per product.

Migration

Migration support for Wisconsin Legal Core teams.

Legal Core migration follows Butler's existing migration program. Founding cohort customers receive migration free. Standard cloud-to-cloud migration is $499 for typical scope up to 5,000 records. Complex migration is $1,499 for multi-source histories, large document libraries, or unusual source structures. Migration fees are credited back as platform credit after 6 months of paid subscription.

  • Clio
  • MyCase
  • Smokeball
  • PracticePanther
  • Filevine
Review migration

Wisconsin Legal Core FAQ

Vertical-specific questions before a state-specific implementation.

Does Legal Core serve Wisconsin criminal defense practices?

Yes. Legal Core is designed for criminal defense practices that need matter organization, court calendar context, discovery and motion workflow, sensitive-record handling, migration support, and pricing that is clear by user count.

Does Legal Core calculate Wisconsin criminal deadlines automatically?

No. Legal Core can keep deadline sources, hearing dates, discovery checkpoints, motion tasks, and review status visible, but attorney review controls legal deadline calculation and filing obligations.

How does Legal Core handle Wisconsin e-filing?

E-filing is treated as implementation scoping. Legal Core can organize filing packet status, responsible users, local rule notes, and review tasks, but this page does not claim direct integration with Wisconsin court filing systems.

What about Wisconsin court forms and local templates?

Forms and templates are treated as filing packet context. Butler can help organize the packet, version history, review status, and responsible user, but it does not claim automatic generation of state court forms unless that scope is separately verified.

Can Legal Core handle sealed or expunged Wisconsin matters?

Legal Core can support sensitive-record flags, access context, audit-oriented notes, and review status. Eligibility, filing, court order interpretation, and record-sealing strategy remain attorney-reviewed legal decisions.

How does Legal Core handle local rule variation in Wisconsin?

Local rule variation is implementation scoping. The practice identifies courts and counties that matter most, then Butler maps the operational checklists, matter stages, and review prompts the team wants in the workflow.

Can a Wisconsin firm migrate from Clio, MyCase, Smokeball, PracticePanther, or Filevine?

Yes, where usable exports or records are available. Migration review covers matters, contacts, calendars, documents, notes, tasks, billing records, and active case status during the Legal Core trial period.

What happens to active Wisconsin cases during migration?

Active cases should move through a parallel-run plan. The firm validates imported calendars, documents, notes, client information, billing context, and matter status before Legal Core becomes the primary system.

Is Legal Core cheaper than general legal practice software?

Butler does not position Legal Core as the cheapest option. Pricing is $99, $149, $199, or custom by user count. The reason to evaluate Legal Core is criminal defense workflow fit, not a pure savings claim.

Where should a Wisconsin defense firm start?

Start with Legal Core pricing if user count, trial period, founding cohort eligibility, and migration terms are the main questions. Use contact for court workflow, migration, local rule, or sensitive-record scoping.

Public sources cited

Vertical-specific claims stay tied to public sources.

State and vertical information cited from public sources current as of May 4, 2026. Butler updates state+vertical content as court, licensing, and practice rules change.

Wisconsin Legal Core evaluation

Review pricing or talk through the state-specific workflow.

Use pricing if the main question is user count, trial period, founding cohort, or migration terms. Use contact if the question is state-specific court fit, source-system migration, or implementation scope.