Hallucinations & Sanctions

AI & Law, Hallucinations & Sanctions

In re Paula M. Miller: Texas Court of Appeals Warns of AI-Hallucinated Citations in Mandamus Petition | Advocate Prakhar

The Chief Justice of Texas’ First Court of Appeals issued a concurring opinion specifically to address what appeared to be AI-fabricated citations in a mandamus petition. The concurrence warned that filing documents with fictitious or misleading citations violates counsel’s duty of candour, and thre

AI & Law, Hallucinations & Sanctions

Bell v. Bell (Pennsylvania 2026): Custody Appellate Brief Contains AI-Hallucinated Citations Preserved in Official Record | Advocate Prakhar

Pennsylvania’s Superior Court decided a grandmother vs. mother custody appeal where the mother’s pro se appellate brief contained AI-hallucinated citations — now flagged by Westlaw’s Editor’s Note. While the court vacated and remanded on substantive grounds (failure to apply the biological parent pr

AI & Law, Hallucinations & Sanctions

Carpenters’ Regional Council v. Wealthridge Construction (Ontario 2026): Labour Board Flags AI Use in Responding Party’s Submissions | Advocate Prakhar

The Ontario Labour Relations Board addressed AI use in union certification proceedings after the union flagged that the responding employer’s submissions appeared to have been prepared using artificial intelligence. The Board noted the submissions were replete with allegations about the union’s cond

AI & Law, Hallucinations & Sanctions

Chamberlain v. City of Albany (Georgia 2026): Pro Se Plaintiff Warned After AI-Hallucinated Citations in Motion to Strike | Advocate Prakhar

A Georgia federal court denied a pro se plaintiff’s motion to strike, noting that the brief cited non-existent cases and explicitly warning that while there is no prohibition on using AI in litigation, pro se litigants must not cite fake opinions — failure to comply with Rule 11 may result in moneta

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