LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb 3, 2026--
Everlaw, the cloud-native investigation and litigation platform, today announced the general availability of EverlawAIDeep Dive, its generative AI feature, for the UK, EU and Canada. Deep Dive fundamentally reshapes how legal teams conduct document review. It allows users to ask natural language questions of an entire document corpus—terabytes in size—and rapidly receive reliable, citation-backed answers directly from their documents throughout the litigation lifecycle.
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Legal professionals are often up against the clock needing to know the contents of a new production from opposing counsel or getting a partner up to speed on the core issues in a matter. In seconds, Deep Dive provides answers to the key issues, using natural language questions.
A Paradigm Shift: Simple to Use, Massive Scale, Answers Legal Teams Can Validate
Everlaw engineers built Deep Dive on three core principles:
“Deep Dive has revolutionised the way we prepare for complex trials. The powerful and near-instant question and answer format allows us to interrogate a large dataset in seconds and locate key documents which we can then rely on at trial,” said Samuel Marrache, Senior Associate (Barrister) at Hassans. “Deep Dive’s ability to effectively trawl through thousands of documents and pinpoint sections of those documents which respond to our queries has also proven to be an invaluable tool during witness cross-examinations. We are looking forward to using Deep Dive from the start of our next matter.”
Strategic Impact Across the Litigation Lifecycle
Deep Dive’s capabilities provide an instantaneous advantage across a case lifecycle:
About Everlaw
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Everlaw AI Deep Dive fundamentally reshapes the way legal teams conduct document review by allowing users to ask natural language questions of an entire document corpus – terabytes in size – and receive rapid, reliable, citation-backed answers directly from their documents. Answers are ranked by confidence level and supported with a list of facts and referenceable resources. When insufficient evidence exists, the system is designed to explicitly indicate that limitation rather than generating unreliable content. Deep Dive helps legal teams move beyond simple document retrieval to intelligent fact extraction and analysis, while maintaining the verification standards essential to legal practice. Deep Dive is helpful throughout the litigation lifecycle: early case assessment, production review, deposition prep and trial readiness.
OSLO, Norway (AP) — The trial of the son of Norway’s crown princess, on charges that include rape, started on Tuesday, opening weeks of proceedings in a case that has cast a shadow on the royal family’s image.
Marius Borg Høiby, 29, is the eldest son of Crown Princess Mette-Marit from a previous relationship and the stepson of the heir to the throne, Crown Prince Haakon. Høiby has no royal title or official duties.
He has been under scrutiny since he was repeatedly arrested in 2024 on various allegations of wrongdoing.
Høiby took his seat at the Oslo district court Tuesday morning for the trial, which is scheduled to last until March 19.
He faces 38 counts. They include rape, abuse in a close relationship against one former partner, acts of violence against another and transporting 3.5 kilograms (7.7 pounds) of marijuana. Other charges include making death threats and traffic violations.
Prosecutors have said that Høiby could face up to 10 years in prison, if convicted. Seven alleged victims are expected to testify.
Reflecting international interest in the trial, the judge addressed the court in English, warning that it was prohibited to record or take photographs in the courtroom and advising that some of the testimony of witnesses would be heard behind closed doors.
Høiby’s defense team has said that he “denies all charges of sexual abuse, as well as the majority of the charges regarding violence.”
He was free pending trial until Sunday, when police said he was arrested over new allegations of assault, threats with a knife and violation of a restraining order.
The Oslo court on Monday granted their request to keep him in detention for up to four weeks on the grounds of a risk of reoffending. Defense lawyer Petar Sekulic said the arrest followed an alleged “incident” involving another person on Sunday.
He declined to give details, but said Høiby contests his detention and his legal team was considering an appeal as soon as he and the other person can provide statements to police.
The indictment centers on four alleged rapes between 2018 and November 2024; alleged violence and threats against a former partner between the summer of 2022 and the fall of 2023; and two alleged acts of violence against a subsequent partner, along with violations of a restraining order.
Høiby's defense team has said that he “denies all charges of sexual abuse, as well as the majority of the charges regarding violence.”
Haakon said last week that he and Mette-Marit don't plan to attend the trial and that the royal house doesn't intend to comment during the proceedings.
King Harald, 88, and the royals are generally popular in Norway, but the Høiby case has been a problem for the family's image.
And Høiby's trial is opening just as Mette-Marit faces renewed scrutiny over her past contacts with Jeffrey Epstein following the release on Friday of a new batch of documents from the Epstein files. They contained several hundred mentions of the crown princess, who already said in 2019 that she regretted having had contact with Epstein, Norwegian media reported.
Mette-Marit said in a statement that she “must take responsibility for not having investigated Epstein’s background more thoroughly, and for not realizing sooner what kind of person he was.” She added: “I showed poor judgment and regret having had any contact with Epstein at all. It is simply embarrassing.”
Mark Lewis reported from Stavanger. Geir Moulson contributed to this report from Berlin.
Members of the media gather ahead of the first day of the trial against Marius Borg Høiby in Oslo, Norway Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026. (Lise Åserud/NTB Scanpix via AP)
FILE - Norway's Marius Borg Hoiby and Crown Princess Mette-Marit in Oslo, June 16, 2022. (Lise Aserud/NTB via AP, File)