California Lawyer Fined $10,000 for Submitting AI-Generated False Citations
A California attorney has been ordered to pay a fine of $10,000 after submitting a court application that contained numerous fictitious citations generated by artificial intelligence. This penalty, reported by CalMatters, marks the largest fine imposed on an individual lawyer in the state for such an infraction.
According to the court's findings, 21 out of the 23 citations included in the attorney's filing were fabricated. The lawyer admitted to not reviewing the generated text prior to submitting it to the court, stating that he intended to use ChatGPT solely to enhance his original content. He claimed he was unaware that the technology could produce misleading or entirely false information.
This incident occurred in the summer of 2023, shortly after OpenAI announced that its ChatGPT model could potentially pass a legal bar exam. The attorney contended that while he wrote the appeal himself, he sought ChatGPT's assistance for revisions. Despite the hefty financial consequence, he argued that it is unrealistic to expect lawyers to refrain from utilizing AI, as it has become an essential tool in the profession. However, he acknowledged the need for caution in its application.
The fine was levied due to the submission of a dubious appeal, violations of court rules, the inclusion of incorrect case citations, and the resulting waste of both time and taxpayer resources. Legal experts have noted that this case is not isolated; there have been numerous instances where AI-generated content has led to problems in court documents.
Mark McKenna, a legal scholar from the University of California, Los Angeles, has observed that universities and law firms are pressuring legal professionals to adopt AI tools without sufficient consideration of the potential consequences. He warns that the situation may worsen before any improvements are realized.