In late spring 2021, friends Jazz Hampton, Andre Creighton and Mychal Frelix launched TurnSignl, a mobile app that connects auto drivers with lawyers during traffic stops or following an accident.
Three years later, the app has surpassed 100,000 downloads with a network of lawyers in all 50 states and enterprise accounts with institutions such as Children’s Minnesota and Morehouse College offering it as a benefit option for employees and students.
The new frontier for TurnSignl, though, is being embedded in car touch screens by car manufacturers.
“Why wouldn’t a car manufacturer say, ‘This is the next OnStar’?” Hampton said, referring to OnStar Corp., the subsidiary of General Motors that offers in-vehicle technology for drivers to connect with first responders in an emergency.
So far, the founders of the company have raised about $6 million from investors, including former General Motors CEO Richard Wagoner.
Hampton, who declined to name specific car brands, said he’s hoping the TurnSignl app will launch in car dashboards in 2025.
Meanwhile, TurnSignl recently announced a revenue-sharing partnership with Driver Technologies, which sells a co-piloting app that turns a driver’s phone into a dash cam. The partnership essentially gives Driver app users access to TurnSignl’s attorneys. Using artificial intelligence, the Driver app allows users to video record their trip as well as receive alerts if they become distracted, drowsy or get too close to the car in front of them.
In an interview edited for length and clarity, Hampton talked about car touch screens, the new revenue-sharing partnership and expansion.