Meet the Customer:
The Delaware Judiciary comprises the Supreme Court, the Court of Chancery, the Superior Court, the Family Court, the Court of Common Pleas, the Justice of the Peace Court, specialty courts, and related judicial agencies. The oldest business court in the U.S., the Delaware Court of Chancery was established in 1792 and has broad jurisdiction over disputes involving Delaware businesses. Delaware is also known for offering a safe regulatory haven for around 1.3 million legal entities.
- Citizens, judges, and attorneys can access updated court case information in real time
- Keep back-end systems current
- Reduce anxiety and frustration over the courtroom experience
- Maintain consistent and error-free data flow through systems
- Courts can provide data to outside services
- Improve community safety by increasing the visibility of perpetrators’ crimes
The Delaware Court system uses AdabasSoftware AG’s high-performance database for large-scale transaction processing on IBM z/OS, Linux, and cloud environments.Read full definition ↗ & NaturalSoftware AG’s programming language for building enterprise applications on IBM z/OS, Linux, and cloud platforms.Read full definition ↗ on IBM Z, as well as EntireX, for mainframeA class of enterprise computer built for very high reliability, security, throughput, and large-scale transaction processing.Read full definition ↗ integration, ensuring a seamless flow of data across legacy and modern systems.
Unlocking the mainframe in Delaware’s courts
The tiny “Diamond State” may be only 100 miles long, but it packs in a lot of courts. From the Supreme Court to specialty courts and related judicial agencies, there are more legal entities in Delaware than there are people. That keeps the state’s court system very busy, and they are constantly looking for ways to streamline their courtroom processes to improve the experience on all sides of the bench.
This mattered for the courts. Criminal Court judges, for example, need to know a person’s record—even what happened that day—before they can accurately assess a case. Do they owe child support? Have they been arrested? Have they served time in prison?
Lack of up-to-date information can lead to wrongful sentencing, or even to letting criminals go free when they should be in jail. This is what concerned the Delaware Judiciary; it feared that valuable information was either not updated quickly or falling through the cracks.
But it also mattered for citizens. For example, they couldn’t pay fees online and had to arrive at the courts early to do so. They would then have to ask a clerk for their scheduled courtroom. Throughout their scheduled hearing, there was limited visibility to real-time information, adding stress to an already stressful experience.
The courts were handcuffed by legacy IT systems. It was taking days to manually sync the data. Clerks in one court would send the data for another clerk in another court to upload. Data on many topics and from many sources, including attorneys and judges assigned to the cases, police arrests, and fines imposed by other courts, must flow through the system continually. This was not happening in Delaware.
Enabling data to flow in real time
“
We are not stuck anymore. It was seamlessly wonderful. And the database administrators love that it is so easy to use.
”
—
Betsy Bachmurski, Senior Application Project Lead
Delaware Courts
So the Delaware Judiciary decided it needed a better way to access and expose information from its proven Adabas & Natural system and other systems. The difference was remarkable. They were able to roll out an interactive voice response (IVR) phone line for citizens. They could pay fees via credit card, which would then communicate with the mainframe applications and send a response indicating what time to report to court. All of a sudden, the whole experience became a bit more pleasant!
Using EntireX, the court system will be able to access all this data from the different court systems while keeping it in sync – without touching the original programs running on the IBM Z platform. By using web services, disparate information from different systems can be unified into a consistent format by mapping the field names of one system to those of another.
They used EntireX to create web services and URLs that app developers could consume one at a time, adding data elements, verifying them, and stopping them if they were incorrect.
New and existing applications can now talk to each other, and the courts can access all data and update within each other’s systems. “We created them very quickly and individualized every app, adding parameters and fields without disrupting the whole shebang,” said Bachmurski. “We are not stuck anymore. It was seamlessly wonderful. And the database administrators love that it is so easy to use.”
See you in court
What’s also exciting about the new integration is that the scheduling system, posted in the lobby of each courthouse, now “knows” which courtroom is being used by whom.
Clerks can enter room numbers, which they often don’t know till the last minute, assign judges, and assign scrolling calendars. All this is updated in real time.
As people enter the building, they are matched with their schedule records and can then go to the info desk to retrieve their data. Case history data is pulled into an app alongside real-time defendant data, so everyone can see when defendants are called and what their charges are.
On real-time monitors, the public can see events, hearings, trials, and room numbers. This keeps citizens informed, helping to reduce stress, which was another objective of the data integrationConnecting data across systems so applications, analytics, and business processes can use it more easily.Read full definition ↗ project.
Judges know the history of their latest cases, updated to the second, and they walk into the courtroom from other courts and agencies, including Family, Superior, Criminal, Corrections, Police, Drug Courts, and Human or Social Services.
“What was even more exciting was that none of the other courts or agencies knew it was happening,” Bachmurski said. “Suddenly, they had more relevant, more up-to-date information without any disruption to their daily activities. Wow!”
That is the power of webMethods for integrating IBM Z applications. Now the Delaware courts can easily address the ever-changing requirements and mandates issued by government and state officials. All while maintaining the high level of security, reliability, and processing provided by running on the IBM Z platform.