Binance founder, Changpeng Zhao (CZ), recently floated a provocative idea on X: train an AI on written laws and past cases to generate judgment recommendations, an “AI Judge Companion.” The concept has sparked global debate, raising an important question for Nigeria: can artificial intelligence help fix the country’s slow, overburdened justice system?
Nigeria’s Justice System: A Case for Reform
Nigeria’s judiciary faces chronic delays, backlogs, and inefficiencies. Cases can take years to resolve, eroding trust and stalling businesses and livelihoods. Reports from the National Judicial Institute consistently cite slow case processing as one of the system’s biggest bottlenecks.
AI, in theory, seems tailor-made for such a problem. A system trained on statutes, precedents, and court transcripts could quickly flag relevant cases, summarize arguments, and offer consistent reasoning, potentially cutting months off case timelines.
Countries like Estonia have already piloted AI-assisted “robot judges” for small claims, showing that when limited to narrow administrative roles, AI can enhance efficiency without undermining fairness.
How the ‘AI Judge Companion’ Could Work in Nigeria
To make CZ’s concept viable, four major hurdles must be addressed:
1. Data Quality and Accessibility
AI thrives on structured, clean, and representative datasets, something Nigeria’s legal system currently lacks. Most court judgments are not digitized or machine-readable, and historical biases within legal archives could amplify systemic unfairness. Without reliable data, an AI judge risks replicating bias at scale.
2. Bias, Transparency, and Explainability
Court judgments are moral and constitutional acts, not just pattern-matching exercises. If AI decisions cannot be explained or audited, they threaten due process and public trust. Experts argue that AI in justice must remain transparent, accountable, and supervised by humans.
3. Institutional Readiness
For AI tools to work, Nigeria’s courts must first modernize their digital infrastructure, provide secure data systems, and train judicial staff. International bodies like the OECD warn that AI in the justice sector must include strong privacy safeguards and human oversight to prevent misuse.
4. Politics and Public Perception
Public trust in Nigeria’s judiciary is already fragile. If an AI system funded or developed by foreign companies, such as Binance or other private players, is introduced, questions will arise about influence, transparency, and control.
Responsible AI Adoption in Nigeria’s Judiciary
Experts recommend a phased and cautious approach:
- Begin with low-stakes cases such as traffic fines or small claims.
- Build transparent, open datasets and publish how the AI models make recommendations.
- Ensure judges remain the final decision-makers — AI should assist, not replace.
- Establish independent oversight committees to audit algorithms and ensure fairness.
- Complement automation with reforms in legal aid, digitization, and judicial ethics.
AI Can Help, But It Can’t Replace Justice
Nigeria’s justice challenges are deeply structural and cultural, involving corruption, poor representation, and uneven power dynamics. AI may speed things up, but efficiency without fairness only accelerates injustice.
The real goal should be to help judges decide better, not replace them. With proper governance, AI in the judiciary could enhance transparency, consistency, and access to justice, but without those guardrails, it risks deepening existing inequities.
Conclusion
CZ’s “AI Judge Companion” presents a bold and futuristic vision, but for Nigeria, the path forward must be incremental, transparent, and human-centered. Technology can make justice faster, but only people and institutions can make it fair.




