Particle.news

Download on the App Store

Courts Crack Down on AI-Generated Legal Errors with Escalating Sanctions

Judges in the U.S. and Canada impose fines, professional discipline, and case dismissals after multiple instances of fabricated citations in legal filings.

Image
Image
Image

Overview

  • Federal and state courts in the U.S. and Canada have sanctioned law firms and attorneys for submitting legal briefs containing fabricated citations generated by AI tools.
  • In California, Special Master Michael Wilner fined two law firms over $31,000 after discovering nine inaccurate citations in a brief, including two non-existent cases.
  • Ontario Superior Court Judge Fred Myers ordered a lawyer to show cause for contempt after finding AI-related citation errors in a legal factum, including references to non-existent cases.
  • In New Mexico, a lawyer was fined $1,500, mandated to complete ethics training, and required to self-report to state bars after outsourcing work with unverified AI-generated citations.
  • Legal experts warn that these reported cases are likely a fraction of a systemic issue, with courts emphasizing the need for attorneys to rigorously verify AI-assisted research.