A federal judge has ordered two attorneys representing Mike Lindell, the MyPillow guy, in a defamation case to pay $3,000 each for submitting a document filled with inaccuracies, such as fake case citations. Judge Nina Y. Wang emphasized that these violations of court rules compromised the integrity expected in legal proceedings.
While the use of artificial intelligence in legal practices is not illegal, the attorneys failed to uphold the requirement that claims must be grounded in actual law, with their false citations falling short. The flawed case relates to a defamation lawsuit where Lindell alleged that a former employee of Dominion Voting Systems tampered with votes, which recently resulted in him being ordered to pay over $2 million. Moreover, the penalty has been seen as a warning to other lawyers who are increasingly using AI in their work, as noted by Professor Maura Grossman, along with a rise in reported errors from attorneys since the previous spring.
Judge Wang highlighted the fine as an important measure to prevent similar incidents, stressing the attorneys’ inability to clarify their filing inaccuracies. When questioned about AI’s role, one attorney only acknowledged its use after being specifically asked. As the integration of new technologies continues to challenge the legal field, Grossman advised that vigilance and thorough checks of AI outputs are essential for attorneys to ensure accuracy.
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