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by unyttigfjelltol
1122 days ago
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Yeah, interestingly, being bad at lawyering isn't a typical reason for discipline. Discipline is integrity and process-based, things like stealing client funds and failing to communicate promptly and reasonably with the client. Arguably the leading goof was using a technology the lawyer didn't understand and failing to inform the client of the risks of using it. Between that and citing garbage precedent-- half the bar might be eligible for discipline on any given day. The judge might issue sanctions but bar discipline is a different ball of wax. |
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Which makes me think that this case should be treated just as if the lawyer wrote it on their own. If the lawyer enters output of chatGPT they generated into court records as if it was their own, it was their own. The lawyer wrote those made up cases into the documents, and the entire matter should be treated as such.
It blows my mind the lawyer didn't double-check the fake cases cited by chatGPT, but had the idea to ask chatGPT whether those citations were legit (and then got his concern satisfied with a simple "yes").