Hallucinations & Sanctions

AI & Law, Hallucinations & Sanctions

Dec v. Mullin: 7th Circuit Admonishes Immigration Lawyer for AI-Generated Fake Citations — But Imposes No Financial Sanction | Advocate Prakhar

The US Seventh Circuit admonished a petitioner’s attorney for including AI-generated non-existent citations and a false quotation in an immigration appeal brief — but imposed no financial penalty, signalling that a formal admonishment from a circuit court carries its own significant weight.

AI & Law, Hallucinations & Sanctions

Hill v. Workday: Supervising Attorney Sanctioned for Failing to Oversee Junior Who Used AI Without Verification | Advocate Prakhar

In a follow-up sanctions order in an employment discrimination case, the court sanctioned the senior named partner of a law firm after the firm’s associate used AI to draft a brief containing a fabricated citation. The supervising attorney argued he did not draft the brief and was unaware — the cour

AI & Law, Hallucinations & Sanctions

Robinson v. Velosio LLC: Pro Se Plaintiff Sanctioned for AI-Hallucinated Cases in Employment Discrimination Brief | Advocate Prakhar

A Maryland federal court dismissed an employment discrimination claim and held a sanctions hearing after pro se plaintiff Devin Robinson’s response brief cited non-existent cases and fabricated quotations, which Robinson attributed to AI assistance. The court dismissed all claims with prejudice, fin

AI & Law, Hallucinations & Sanctions

DSME Construction v. U.S. Army (ASBCA): Korean Contractor’s Surreply Struck for 16 Non-Existent Cases; Dismissal Denied

A Korean contractor’s ASBCA surreply was struck after 27 problematic citations were found, including 16 to non-existent cases — but the Board declined to dismiss the entire $100M+ contract appeal as too severe. The Board found a ‘lack of candour’ about how the AI-generated errors arose, denying the

AI & Law, Hallucinations & Sanctions

Hrdlichka v. Bengston: Arkansas Court of Appeals Dismisses Appeal Over AI-Fabricated Citations in Historic First | Advocate Prakhar

In Arkansas’s first-ever published ruling on AI-hallucinated citations, the Court of Appeals dismissed a pro se appellant’s entire appeal because his brief cited multiple cases that simply do not exist in any legal database. The court issued a comprehensive warning about AI use in appellate practice

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