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The Courts AI

'Extremely Remorseful' Lawyers Confronted by Judge Over 'Legal Gibberish' Citations from ChatGPT (apnews.com) 78

The Associated Press reports: Two apologetic lawyers responding to an angry judge in Manhattan federal court blamed ChatGPT Thursday for tricking them into including fictitious legal research in a court filing... [Attorney Steven A. Schwartz] told U.S. District Judge P. Kevin Castel he was "operating under a misconception ... that this website was obtaining these cases from some source I did not have access to." He said he "failed miserably" at doing follow-up research to ensure the citations were correct.

"I did not comprehend that ChatGPT could fabricate cases," Schwartz said...

The judge confronted Schwartz with one legal case invented by the computer program. It was initially described as a wrongful death case brought by a woman against an airline only to morph into a legal claim about a man who missed a flight to New York and was forced to incur additional expenses. "Can we agree that's legal gibberish?" Castel asked.

Schwartz said he erroneously thought that the confusing presentation resulted from excerpts being drawn from different parts of the case. When Castel finished his questioning, he asked Schwartz if he had anything else to say. "I would like to sincerely apologize," Schwartz said. He added that he had suffered personally and professionally as a result of the blunder and felt "embarrassed, humiliated and extremely remorseful."

He said that he and the firm where he worked — Levidow, Levidow & Oberman — had put safeguards in place to ensure nothing similar happens again.

An attorney for the law firm also told the judge that lawyers have historically had a hard time with technology, particularly new technology. "And it's not getting easier."
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'Extremely Remorseful' Lawyers Confronted by Judge Over 'Legal Gibberish' Citations from ChatGPT

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    • When is that moron getting disbarred?
    • I think it's a good development - especially that it's being reported - as maybe people will comprehend this technology for what it actually is - a "statistical parrot" instead of assuming it's actually intelligent in any way, because otherwise things might've been much worse.

    • by slazzy ( 864185 )
      I wonder how much they charge per hour and how many hours for typing the question into ChatGPT?
    • Throw the book at him! Literally, not figuratively! And stream it live on YouTube!

    • Agree that the excuse is pathetic, but many programmers do the same thing when they copy and past code, which is often a source of bugs or security vulnerabilities. Unfortunately, I don't see the same level of attention. It appears we expect higher standards from lawyers than programmers.
  • by Arethan ( 223197 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @05:06PM (#63592060) Journal

    Honestly, what a fool. This guy is supposedly educated, and yet put his livelihood income on the line on a guess that the machine was "smart". Please revoke his license for 3-6 months - that should send a solid message. If he feels the true fault is on the side of ChatGPT, then I do encourage him to file suit. Hell, I hope he does it anyhow. The general artificial "intelligence" industry could probably use some legal challenges at this stage

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by AmazingRuss ( 555076 )
      Reminds me of the suicide hotline they fired the operators for to replace with AI, then had to shut down because the AI was giving bad advice. Free usually isn't better.
      • by BenFenner ( 981342 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @07:08PM (#63592234)
        That was an eating disorder hotline. It was only last week. Your memory is playing tricks on you.
        • by narcc ( 412956 )

          He's still doing better than the average chat bot or Slashdot editor. Zing!

          Wait. I take that back. This is a revelation. I think we've stumbled on a job that could actually be replaced with a chat bot. Not in some nebulous future time, but right now. Sure, it's going to post dups and misleading or flat-out incorrect summaries, but that's exactly the kind of thing we've come to expect from Slashdot. It make up some nonsense links, but no one reads the articles anyway so who would notice?

        • That was an eating disorder hotline. It was only last week. Your memory is playing tricks on you.

          No, it was definitely a suicide hotline. The case is real and can be found on legal reference databases such as LexisNexis and Westlaw.

    • Honestly, what a fool. This guy is supposedly educated, and yet put his livelihood income on the line on a guess that the machine was "smart". Please revoke his license for 3-6 months - that should send a solid message. If he feels the true fault is on the side of ChatGPT, then I do encourage him to file suit. Hell, I hope he does it anyhow. The general artificial "intelligence" industry could probably use some legal challenges at this stage

      I agree that a 3 to 6 month Suspension with Written Reprimand is about right for this.

    • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
      The person in question is a legal professional not a technology specialist, different skillsets. I bet the individua just thought "I'lll give this ChhtGPT thing a wirl, maybe I can do more cases at once than the competition, there is a partnership slot opening up soon...". This is ofc bure speculation on my part, and imho rather wrekless on the individuals part.
    • A classic example of the 98% of lawyers who give the others a bad name, sheesh.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Unfortunately, his sanction will likely be far worse than 6 months. This is the sort of thing where the judge is really going to refer you to the bar association or supreme court to get you disbarred for a while for wasting the court's time and resources.

      I mean, first, did you think the court wasn't going to check your references? Or the defence? You're quoting reasons why the case should go ahead, and the court and defence are trying to get your lawsuit thrown out, so everything you write will be immediate

  • Vice versa (Score:5, Insightful)

    by roskakori ( 447739 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @05:09PM (#63592066)

    An attorney for the law firm also told the judge that lawyers have historically had a hard time with technology, particularly new technology.

    Tech people have historically had a hard time with laws, particularly new laws.

    That does not change the fact that they still have to comply to these laws.

    • An attorney for the law firm also told the judge that lawyers have historically had a hard time with technology, particularly new technology.

      Tech people have historically had a hard time with laws, particularly new laws.

      That does not change the fact that they still have to comply to these laws.

      Well said.

  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @05:11PM (#63592076) Homepage

    Do you suppose all judges are so scrupulous as to check the court cases cited in a court filing?

    How many lawyers have just made up cases to support their filings, even *without* ChatGPT!

    • by RandomUsername99 ( 574692 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @05:15PM (#63592086)
      Judges don't but their clerks sure do.
      • Judges don't but their clerks sure do.

        They can just ask ChatGPT to check the reference of the opposing counsel!

    • by innocent_white_lamb ( 151825 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @05:16PM (#63592090)

      Your lawyer should be checking the references that the other guy's lawyer provided.

      That's why you pay a lawyer.

      • Your lawyer should be checking the references that the other guy's lawyer provided.

        That's why you pay a lawyer.

        Well, one of the reasons!

        But ever since WestLaw started checking for you (Goodbye to Shepard's (sniff)), there really isn't any excuse to cite a incorrectly cited, nonexistent, overruled or vacated Case.

        • Just because a referenced case exists, doesn't mean it's relevant to the filing at hand. And WestLaw won't check that for you.

          • Just because a referenced case exists, doesn't mean it's relevant to the filing at hand. And WestLaw won't check that for you.

            True and True.

            But, unless it's your key Authority, or you do it more than once; that usually just earns you a derisive comment from opposing counsel.

            • Back in the day it was one of the few reliable ways to be brought up on Rule 11 sanctions.

              Paralegals AND lawyers were expected to do good research and Shepardize any case law cited whether central to their argument or not.

              • Back in the day it was one of the few reliable ways to be brought up on Rule 11 sanctions.

                Paralegals AND lawyers were expected to do good research and Shepardize any case law cited whether central to their argument or not.

                True.

      • Yep, they certainly *should* check. But as with any profession, there are those who do their job right, and those who do as little as they can get away with.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Only if he's a money grubbing thief trying to drain you dry.

        Paralegals exist for a reason. If your lawyer did all the drudgery of paralegals and secretaries, your legal bills would be 10x higher.

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      I'm guessing that the opposition lawyer do check them. If they don't, they aren't worth the money you are paying them!

      • by Anonymous Coward

        What kind of sucker pays his lawyers? All they do is lose anyway. What choice do I have? I can't help myself, it's like a magnet, I just start screwing them. When you're big star, you know, they let you do it.

        --John Baron (I lost my 1 digit UI, so unfair. No one has been treated more unfairly than me, can you believe it? It was even the same as my best 18 hole round.)

      • Yep, and there are certainly lawyers who aren't worth the money you pay them.

    • Also, a) the opposing counsel would have to be grossly incompetent to not check such things, and b) whatever advantage they might gain in their case by citing a fake opinion is not worth facing the very likely legal, professional, and personal consequences of counsel perjuring themselves in a court filing.
      • And the lawyer in this story, who used ChatGPT in such a way that he submitted fake case references, was grossly incompetent. He's not the only grossly incompetent lawyer out there.

  • Idiotic (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RandomUsername99 ( 574692 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @05:19PM (#63592092)
    One if the first things I did with chatGPT was give it a number of citations in various formats. 100% failure rate. The results weren't even close. Not even the same type of courts or subjectâ" compete fabrication. You'd have to be a giant fucking idiot to do this. I wonder if it wasn't a paralegal or intern and the lawyers didn't actually check.
  • He probably hadn't even read the motions until he was taken to task

  • I'm a bit surprised (Score:5, Interesting)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @05:31PM (#63592104)

    Apparently some junior lawyers aren't given access to Westlaw or LexisNexis? Because that seems to be what these guys are claiming.

  • For all the hype about Chat GPT taking our jobs ("Dy-tk-urr-joo!"), how can it be used in situation where getting it wrong or inaccurate even just 5-10% of the time is a no go?

    Even when there is no wrong answer, say in art, the plot of a movie has to make sense, an image has to make sense, and music has to not have too many off-notes. In programming, if it generates a bunch of code but you have to check and fix, is it really saving time? If I have it summarize a book or a wikipedia page, how can I be confid

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      I don't claim to have the answers to any of these.

      I do. The capabilities people are claiming are simply not possible with the technology as it is.

      It's also not saving you any time. At least, I've yet to see anyone actually save time playing with one of these things. The usual pattern is to spend a few hours trying to get it to produce something that they can then spend a few hours adapting to their needs before claiming victory. "It wrote this in seconds!" They'll claim. The problem is they invariably ignore the first few hours tinkering, the second f

      • One usage that has saved me quite some time: asking it to write an official letter, for instance to my internet provider who messed up, in German. I can read German well enough, but writing is a chore. The outcome wasn't usable without slight editing, but for a 3 minute prompt, plus one rewording, I got some prose that would have taken me an hour, in under 10 minutes. I also know its shortcomings, wouldn't send of its musings without proofreading.
  • As a lawyer (Score:4, Insightful)

    by doubledown00 ( 2767069 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @06:09PM (#63592148)

    I check and recheck every citation in every brief I do. Maybe a new case has come down that changes it. Maybe a case has been overruled. Maybe my arguments went in a different direction and this case isn't relevant anymore.

    When I get a brief from an opposing party, you better believe I check every case and statue they use. And I'm not even at a top 100 firm in New York city.

    These Guys procrastinated until the last minute and got caught trying to cut corners. Let this be a lesson to other lawyers.

    • You forgot the disclaimer that the post wasn't legal advice, etc etc ;)

      Yes I know you were not suggesting / advicing anything. You were just stating how you do your work. Just making a joke since almost anything by a lawyer has that disclaimer.

      And yes, I know the above statement probably spoils the joke, but there are too many pedants who will probably point out the above :(

  • by alexgieg ( 948359 ) <alexgieg@gmail.com> on Saturday June 10, 2023 @06:13PM (#63592154) Homepage

    An attorney for the law firm also told the judge that lawyers have historically had a hard time with technology, particularly new technology.

    My brother provides IT to some law firms. The kind that's owned by two 80yo partners.

    In one of those the method of integration between computers isn't a network share, it's pendrives. Servers are too complicated, you know, and they like dings things as they know how to, which was by floppies, but alas floppies aren't sold anymore, so they had to upgrade.

    In another, the lawyers like to write details of the case in the filenames of the files. All the details. Think 600+ characters-long filenames. My brother tried implementing WebDAV there, and discovered the hard way how full URLs are limited to 256 characters. And no, the law firm doesn't want to change how they "manage" their documents.

    In a third, they want to do GDPR compliance. The 50yo main partner didn't think it was an important enough problem, that a letter of intentions would suffice. He discovered it was a very serious issue when his biggest clients started dropping their contracts with due to a lack of full GDPR compliance on his part, so he scrambled to try and have this sorted before he lost all his clients.

    So, yeah, that checks.

    PS: For extra fun points, remember most congresscritters are lawyers. Yes, the same ones who write the laws on how technology should behave.

    • For extra fun points, remember most congresscritters are lawyers. Yes, the same ones who write the laws on how technology should behave.

      Don't worry, those bills are written by corporate lawyers, then handed to those congresscreeps for sponsorship.

    • An attorney for the law firm also told the judge that lawyers have historically had a hard time with technology, particularly new technology.

      [...]

      So, yeah, that checks.

      PS: For extra fun points, remember most congresscritters are lawyers. Yes, the same ones who write the laws on how technology should behave.

      I'd put it differently.

      People in general have historically had a hard time with technology, particularly new technology.

      IT professionals are a partial exception.

      Because of the prestige surrounding lawyers people tend to expect more... but as with most things people learn the minimum they need to get by and then move on.

      In another, the lawyers like to write details of the case in the filenames of the files. All the details. Think 600+ characters-long filenames. My brother tried implementing WebDAV there, and discovered the hard way how full URLs are limited to 256 characters. And no, the law firm doesn't want to change how they "manage" their documents.

      Oddly enough I think I can understand where they were coming from.

      Open the folder with all the case docs, put the file browser in list mode, and you just glance through the details of di

      • by pz ( 113803 )

        I use the filesystem as a similar database for a similar set of objects -- PDFs of scientific articles. Putting basic information in the filename is immensely useful. Normally, that includes first and last author, year of publication and journal, and then, often, a very brief description of the area or primary finding.

        Are there better ways? Yes, indeed. Am I going to spend hundreds of man-hours to convert to a new system when this works reasonably well in terms of finding articles, and moreover, integrat

  • by Petersko ( 564140 ) on Saturday June 10, 2023 @08:35PM (#63592374)
  • as Donald Trump**'s TV lawyers. I've heard he needs a lot and since they speak gibberish they're on his wavelength.

  • Take their licenses away. They clearly aren't competent enough to continue.

    • They may be competent lawyers, but they've set that aside because they're lazy.

      Which in a way is worse - a bad lawyer can always do some basic legal work (assuming they aren't actually 'bad' bad, merely 'not very good' bad) within their ability, but a lazy lawyer will always cut corners and clients are going to get burned.

      • by Bahbus ( 1180627 )

        I'm all for being lazy. But the being competent part means, at least, checking over your laziness. I'm all for them using ChatGPT to help them put stuff together in a nice, readable way. However, you have to double check it and/or tweak it. If you admittedly can't double check the source of something, you shouldn't include it. Doing so anyway shows a lack of competence.

  • "Lawyers being bad with technology" is not a legitimate excuse. Instead, it's the reason why this lawyer's negligence caused his fall so visibly. Lawyers aren't allowed to put random, unverified things into legal documents, whether they come from a layperson or from non-certified software. I'm happy that the technological weakness caused by the fabricating ChatGPT helped reveal such negligence

    • As someone who provides IT support to a fairly significant law firm with headquarters in New York, I feel obligated to point out that the Bar Association ethics rules requires attorneys to "understand the technology they use". Admitting you didn't isn't a good look.
  • "...the firm where he worked â" Levidow, Levidow & Oberman â" ..."

    Is there really no bad publicity?
    Because I'm sure their firm really appreciated the call out here.

  • Cheaters who get caught are always extremely remorseful. Remorseful that they got caught, that is.

  • It's not just that they used ChatGTP to write part of a filing, it's that they also made a further false response when the sources were first questioned , and then lied to the judge directly in court.. A 3-6 month suspension might be sufficient if they just got caught using ChatGTP, but filing a false response and openly lying to the judge in court ups that quite a bit. They are going to get the hammer dropped on them , both as a deterrent for other lawyers and because these idiots just kept digging when th

  • The ChatGPT EULA clearly states that the results may be inaccurate. Are these lawyers claiming that they didn't read the "fine print" before using a product?
  • IMHO, all legalese is gibberish designed to confuse people who don't speak legalese. The net effect is that you have to pay big bucks for someone to interpret it for you. Seems to me that ChatGPT is trying to make the language even more inscrutable instead of less which, if I know lawyers, is by design in order to keep their jobs. What I can see happening is that eventually people will subscribe to an AI-lawyer who will go up against other AI-lawyers for you and you'll never see the battle itself. Think

  • ...but wouldn't it be super-beneficial for lawyers to get these kinds of "GPT and AI sucks!" type clickbait articles out?. It's financially important to get the public to believe that. It seems to be a common thing I've noticed, and not just in legal circles. The people with the most to lose purposefully release "Look how crap this Image / Newspaper article / song is!" to the media. I find it suspicious.
  • This is the third time I'm reading about this. Is this the third report of the same story?
    If so, dear moderators, please know your articles.

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