Magistrate Judge Matthewman just issued a stern warning to lawyers practicing in our district: don't throw your brief drafting car keys to artificial intelligence. A lawyer used AI to do some research and dropped one of the AI-generated citations into his response brief. The problem? The case was fictional. When opposing counsel and the court figured it out, it became a question of sanctions. Because the lawyer came clean relatively quickly, the court didn't go with the nuclear option (no striking of pleadings or the like). Still, the sanctions were meaningful and even extended to the attorney who is serving as local counsel for the out-of-town lawyer who drafted the brief. Opinion is below.
Another wild "AI-gone-wrong" story involves a "Summer reading list for 2025" article that was published this past Sunday in several prominent newspapers, including the Chicago Sun-Times and The Philadelphia Inquirer. The article recommended several novels, including "The Last Algorithm," by Andy Weir, the author who wrote "The Martian." But Weir didn't write The Last Algorithm. Nor did anyone else, for that matter, because the novel doesn't exist. The author of the article used AI to come up with a list of books and didn't bother checking that list before the article went to print. “I just straight up missed it,” the author told the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday. “I can’t blame anybody else.”
Be careful out there, whether you're reading or writing!
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