In most jurisdictions, a police officer arrests and takes offenders to jail and a criminal complaint is filed before a judge. The judge sets bail, and if necessary, appoints defense counsel for the accused. Inadequate cases are later dropped days, weeks, or months later by prosecutors. This happens only after extensive investigation and usually not before the accused spent unnecessary time in jail. This process effects upwards of 8-10 million annually (disproportionately, effecting Black Americans, and individuals with mental health conditions). Notably, 25%-40% of these cases are dropped, meaning millions are impacted. In 1973, Harris County, Texas addressed this injustice and inefficiency, it's success has gone largely unknown: prosecutors communicate with the police officer at the moment before booking an arrest. The officer explains the circumstances of the arrest, while the prosecutor evaluates if circumstances meet the required elements of the crime. If satisfied, the prosecutor 'vetts' the arrest, and only then does the police officer file. We quantified the efficacy of this unique system, and upgraded it to a cloud-based software that guides the prosecutors and officers through a racially blind decision. We've quantified results comparing dropped cases and found this system will save countless amounts in social justice costs, and save $6-20 million in taxpayer dollars annually.