Close Menu
Alpha Leaders
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
What's On
Hydration Breaks At 2026 World Cup Raise Controversy For FIFA

Hydration Breaks At 2026 World Cup Raise Controversy For FIFA

3 July 2026
Japan taps Cognition’s ‘Devin-kun’ as legacy code, shrinking workforce opens market for AI coding

Japan taps Cognition’s ‘Devin-kun’ as legacy code, shrinking workforce opens market for AI coding

3 July 2026
Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide Teased, Fighting For F-Droid, Magic V6 Arrives In UK

Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide Teased, Fighting For F-Droid, Magic V6 Arrives In UK

3 July 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Alpha Leaders
newsletter
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Alpha Leaders
Home » Would you hire the lawyer who just got sanctioned for using AI?
News

Would you hire the lawyer who just got sanctioned for using AI?

Press RoomBy Press Room16 May 20264 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email WhatsApp
Would you hire the lawyer who just got sanctioned for using AI?

All over the country, lawyers are using artificial intelligence to write briefs and help them prepare for court. It is not going well.

A family in Alabama lost a trust dispute last month because their lawyer filed citations to cases that do not exist. The Alabama Supreme Court dismissed their appeal, calling the conduct egregious, and barred the lawyer from filing in that court again without co-counsel sign-off.

In the same month, a federal judge in Oregon sanctioned two lawyers $110,000, the largest AI hallucination penalty in American legal history, after they submitted 23 fabricated citations and eight invented quotations. The case was subsequently dismissed.

In Manhattan, a judge ruled recently that a defendant who used a general-purpose AI chatbot to help prepare his case had waived attorney-client privilege. If you type your defense strategy into a chatbot, the government can subpoena it, read it, and use it against you.

According to a database compiled by lawyer and data scientist Damien Charlotin, there have now been more than 1,300 cases globally where a court or tribunal has commented on AI-generated hallucinations in legal filings. Behind each of those cases is a client who paid a lawyer and trusted the system. Behind each, more often than not, sits a lawyer who placed blind trust in a technology that generates text with complete confidence and no capacity for self-verification. 

Not all AI is created equal. There is a real difference between general-purpose large language models like ChatGPT and Claude that have been trained on the open web, and industry-specific legal AI tools that are plugged into the same databases lawyers have been using for decades. Unfortunately, Wall Street has struggled to tell the difference.

When Anthropic released a legal plug-in for Claude recently, it contributed to a roughly $285 billion selloff in technology stocks. The chaos in courtrooms around the world tells a different story. Solving legal AI is harder than tweaking a standard large language model.

I have practiced law across three jurisdictions and now serve as General Counsel of one of the world’s largest legal technology companies, LexisNexis.

The question I am asked most often right now is, “Which AI is most capable?” My view is that this is the wrong question. The right one, “Which AI can be trusted in a courtroom?” is a different question. In law, those are not the same thing.

The obligation runs to the client and to the court simultaneously. The American Bar Association has identified how five of its Model Rules of Professional Conduct are directly impacted by AI use. They are competence, confidentiality, candor toward the tribunal, and supervisory responsibility.

When a lawyer submits a hallucinated citation, they fail their client. It is also a failure to the court. In fact, it corrupts the record the entire system depends on.

The structural problem runs deeper than which model a lawyer uses. General-purpose AI is designed to produce text that looks like the right answer, which in most domains is most of the job. In law it is the wrong job. The model cannot verify that the case it cited exists, that the case says what the brief claims, or that the case remains controlling authority. The gap is architectural, not a capability problem to be solved by the next training run. The consequences are concrete. Lawyers get sanctioned, claims get dismissed, defendants get handed to the prosecution.

The question to ask of any legal AI tool is not how it performs on a benchmark, but what it is built on, and whether a lawyer can trace, verify, and stand behind the output in open court.

There are two ways AI changes the practice of law. The first is compression, the same work, faster. The second is expansion, work that was never possible before. AI’s expansion potential in law is enormous, but it can only rest on a foundation that does not fabricate the underlying law. Litigation strategy built on decades of judge-specific outcome data is not a faster version of an existing task. It is work that did not previously exist. The same is true of regulatory monitoring built into deal documents that update the moment the law changes. There are many other examples, and the list grows weekly.

The market will eventually price what the profession has always known. In law, the cost of a wrong answer is paid in someone’s freedom, their assets, or their family’s future.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

Law
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link

Related Articles

Japan taps Cognition’s ‘Devin-kun’ as legacy code, shrinking workforce opens market for AI coding

Japan taps Cognition’s ‘Devin-kun’ as legacy code, shrinking workforce opens market for AI coding

3 July 2026
You can get revenge on all those bots clogging up your email with dynamic pricing discounts

You can get revenge on all those bots clogging up your email with dynamic pricing discounts

3 July 2026
Microsoft’s next big bet isn’t on a model but on becoming the Swiss Army knife of enterprise AI

Microsoft’s next big bet isn’t on a model but on becoming the Swiss Army knife of enterprise AI

3 July 2026
‘We are in a new era’: Trump’s bombshell .2 billion income haul, the ‘Big Player Theory’ and what happens when the president becomes the bubble

‘We are in a new era’: Trump’s bombshell $2.2 billion income haul, the ‘Big Player Theory’ and what happens when the president becomes the bubble

3 July 2026
Brutal heatwave in France is killing 2,000 people per week

Brutal heatwave in France is killing 2,000 people per week

3 July 2026
‘It’s just his AI and my AI going back and forth’: how ‘social offloading’ erodes work relationships

‘It’s just his AI and my AI going back and forth’: how ‘social offloading’ erodes work relationships

3 July 2026
Don't Miss
Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

By Press Room27 December 2024

Every year, millions of people unwrap Christmas gifts that they do not love, need, or…

Exclusive: DeFi platform Azura launches after raising .9 million from Initialized

Exclusive: DeFi platform Azura launches after raising $6.9 million from Initialized

22 October 2024
Sam Altman’s World Wants To Scan Your Eyes To Prove You’re Human

Sam Altman’s World Wants To Scan Your Eyes To Prove You’re Human

22 October 2024
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Latest Articles
You can get revenge on all those bots clogging up your email with dynamic pricing discounts

You can get revenge on all those bots clogging up your email with dynamic pricing discounts

3 July 20263 Views
Gearing Up For 250: A July 3 Post

Gearing Up For 250: A July 3 Post

3 July 20262 Views
Microsoft’s next big bet isn’t on a model but on becoming the Swiss Army knife of enterprise AI

Microsoft’s next big bet isn’t on a model but on becoming the Swiss Army knife of enterprise AI

3 July 20262 Views
Schneider Electric To Acquire Cognite For Its’ Cutting-Edge Technology

Schneider Electric To Acquire Cognite For Its’ Cutting-Edge Technology

3 July 20262 Views

Recent Posts

  • Hydration Breaks At 2026 World Cup Raise Controversy For FIFA
  • Japan taps Cognition’s ‘Devin-kun’ as legacy code, shrinking workforce opens market for AI coding
  • Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide Teased, Fighting For F-Droid, Magic V6 Arrives In UK
  • iPhone 18 Pro Pre-Order Dates, New iPad Pro Details, iPhone 16e Special Offers
  • You can get revenge on all those bots clogging up your email with dynamic pricing discounts

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
About Us
About Us

Alpha Leaders is your one-stop website for the latest Entrepreneurs and Leaders news and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks
Hydration Breaks At 2026 World Cup Raise Controversy For FIFA

Hydration Breaks At 2026 World Cup Raise Controversy For FIFA

3 July 2026
Japan taps Cognition’s ‘Devin-kun’ as legacy code, shrinking workforce opens market for AI coding

Japan taps Cognition’s ‘Devin-kun’ as legacy code, shrinking workforce opens market for AI coding

3 July 2026
Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide Teased, Fighting For F-Droid, Magic V6 Arrives In UK

Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide Teased, Fighting For F-Droid, Magic V6 Arrives In UK

3 July 2026
Most Popular
iPhone 18 Pro Pre-Order Dates, New iPad Pro Details, iPhone 16e Special Offers

iPhone 18 Pro Pre-Order Dates, New iPad Pro Details, iPhone 16e Special Offers

3 July 20261 Views
You can get revenge on all those bots clogging up your email with dynamic pricing discounts

You can get revenge on all those bots clogging up your email with dynamic pricing discounts

3 July 20263 Views
Gearing Up For 250: A July 3 Post

Gearing Up For 250: A July 3 Post

3 July 20262 Views

Archives

  • July 2026
  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • March 2022
  • January 2021
  • March 2020
  • January 2020

Categories

  • Blog
  • Business
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Global
  • Innovation
  • Leadership
  • Living
  • Money & Finance
  • News
  • Press Release
© 2026 Alpha Leaders. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.