pm_playbook

SIRVEC — Evidence Tracking & Chain of Custody Platform

Context


Problem Statement

The Guardia Civil needed a secure and reliable way to register crime scenes, track evidence, and guarantee the chain of custody from the moment evidence is collected until it is presented in court.

While technology could clearly improve accuracy and traceability, the core risk was not technical.

The real problem was:

If judges and the justice system do not legally accept the platform and its technology, the product has no value.

In particular, the use of blockchain for evidence tracking raised strong concerns in a system historically based on paper documentation and manual signatures.


Goals & Success Criteria

User Outcomes

Business Outcomes


Constraints

Institutional

Product


Discovery & Validation Work

Key Insight

The biggest risk was legal legitimacy, not usability or performance.

Without legal acceptance:

Validation Approach

Instead of user discovery, the focus was on legal discovery:


Options Considered

Option A: Traditional Digital System (No Blockchain)


Decision & Rationale

We chose Option C:
Using blockchain only after proving its legal admissibility.

The decision was based on:


Actions Taken

Outcome

This report became a key artifact for client and institutional approval.


Delivery Summary

What Was Built

What Was Critical Beyond Code


Results

Qualitative

Strategic


What Worked Well


What Didn’t Work


Key Learnings


What I’d Do Differently


Final Takeaway

In justice systems, trust is the product.

Technology only creates value when it is legally accepted, institutionally trusted, and clearly understood by those who ultimately decide its validity: the judges.