18 Lawyers Caught Using AI Explain Why They Did It -- 404 Media [View all]
https://www.404media.co/18-lawyers-caught-using-ai-explain-why-they-did-it/?ref=daily-stories-newsletter
Jason Koebler
Lawyers blame IT, family emergencies, their own poor judgment, their assistants, illness, and more.
Earlier this month, an appeals court in California issued a blistering decision and record $10,000 fine against a lawyer who submitted a brief in which nearly all of the legal quotations in plaintiffs opening brief, and many of the quotations in plaintiffs reply brief, are fabricated through the use of ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Grok. The court said it was publishing its opinion as a warning to California lawyers that they will be held responsible if they do not catch AI hallucinations in their briefs.
In that case, the lawyer in question asserted that he had not been aware that generative AI frequently fabricates or hallucinates legal sources and, thus, he did not manually verify [the quotations] against more reliable sources. He accepted responsibility for the fabrications and said he had since taken measures to educate himself so that he does not repeat such errors in the future.
As the judges remark in their opinion, the use of generative AI by lawyers is now everywhere, and when it is used in ways that introduce fake citations or fake evidence, it is bogging down courts all over America (and the world). For the last few months, 404 Media has been analyzing dozens of court cases around the country in which lawyers have been caught using generative AI to craft their arguments, generate fictitious citations, generate false evidence, cite real cases but misinterpret them, or otherwise take shortcuts that has introduced inaccuracies into their cases. Our main goal was to learn more about why lawyers were using AI to write their briefs, especially when so many lawyers have been caught making errors that lead to sanctions and that ultimately threaten their careers and their standings in the profession.
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What we found was incredibly fascinating, and reveals a mix of lawyers blaming IT issues, personal and family emergencies, their own poor judgment and carelessness, and demands from their firms and the industry to be more productive and take on more casework. But most often, they simply blame their assistants.
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