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      Lawyers keep giving weak-sauce excuses for fake AI citations in court docs

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 11 November 2025

    Amid what one judge called an “epidemic” of fake AI-generated case citations bogging down courts, some common excuses are emerging from lawyers hoping to dodge the most severe sanctions for filings deemed misleading.

    Using a database compiled by french lawyer and AI researcher Damien Charlotin, Ars reviewed 23 cases where lawyers were sanctioned for AI hallucinations. In many, judges noted that the simplest path to avoid or diminish sanctions was to admit that AI was used as soon as it’s detected, act humble, self-report the error to relevant legal associations, and voluntarily take classes on AI and law. But not every lawyer takes the path of least resistance, Ars’ review found, with many instead offering excuses that no judge found credible. Some even lie about their AI use, judges concluded.

    Since 2023—when fake AI citations started being publicized—the most popular excuse has been that the lawyer didn’t know AI was used to draft a filing.

    Read full article

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    • tagai tagai tagai tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai citations tagai citations tagai citations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagai tagai tagai tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai citations tagai citations tagai citations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagai tagai tagai tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai citations tagai citations tagai citations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Lawyers keep giving weak-sauce excuses for fake AI citations in court docs

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 11 November 2025

    Amid what one judge called an “epidemic” of fake AI-generated case citations bogging down courts, some common excuses are emerging from lawyers hoping to dodge the most severe sanctions for filings deemed misleading.

    Using a database compiled by french lawyer and AI researcher Damien Charlotin, Ars reviewed 23 cases where lawyers were sanctioned for AI hallucinations. In many, judges noted that the simplest path to avoid or diminish sanctions was to admit that AI was used as soon as it’s detected, act humble, self-report the error to relevant legal associations, and voluntarily take classes on AI and law. But not every lawyer takes the path of least resistance, Ars’ review found, with many instead offering excuses that no judge found credible. Some even lie about their AI use, judges concluded.

    Since 2023—when fake AI citations started being publicized—the most popular excuse has been that the lawyer didn’t know AI was used to draft a filing.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai citations tagai citations tagai citations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagai tagai tagai tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai citations tagai citations tagai citations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagai tagai tagai tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai citations tagai citations tagai citations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Lawyers keep giving weak-sauce excuses for fake AI citations in court docs

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 11 November 2025

    Amid what one judge called an “epidemic” of fake AI-generated case citations bogging down courts, some common excuses are emerging from lawyers hoping to dodge the most severe sanctions for filings deemed misleading.

    Using a database compiled by french lawyer and AI researcher Damien Charlotin, Ars reviewed 23 cases where lawyers were sanctioned for AI hallucinations. In many, judges noted that the simplest path to avoid or diminish sanctions was to admit that AI was used as soon as it’s detected, act humble, self-report the error to relevant legal associations, and voluntarily take classes on AI and law. But not every lawyer takes the path of least resistance, Ars’ review found, with many instead offering excuses that no judge found credible. Some even lie about their AI use, judges concluded.

    Since 2023—when fake AI citations started being publicized—the most popular excuse has been that the lawyer didn’t know AI was used to draft a filing.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai citations tagai citations tagai citations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagai tagai tagai tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai citations tagai citations tagai citations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagai tagai tagai tagfeatures tagfeatures tagfeatures tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagai citations tagai citations tagai citations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai hallucinations tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagai lawyer tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagartificial intelligence tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatbot tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagchatgpt tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot tagmicrosoft copilot

    • Pictures 3 image

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