BadMoonRisin said:
how god dang dumb do we have to get before we see this as a problem?
We already see it as a problem.
BadMoonRisin said:
how god dang dumb do we have to get before we see this as a problem?
BMX Bandit said:BadMoonRisin said:
how god dang dumb do we have to get before we see this as a problem?
We already see it as a problem.
doubledog said:
For every incompetent DEI hire exposed, there are 10 out there hiding behind their paychecks.
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And here my impression of Georgia lawyers was just that they're really thick-headed and slow to learn. Who knew thst they were also lazy and that they lie a lot?
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I'm going to try to find something more meaningful to do with my time than hang out here,
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She is the appellate lawyer. Would she have been part of the trial court motion opposing a new trial due to the defendant having a lousy lawyer?
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I'm not a litigator but appellate work is a specialized skill. Years so, I met a lawyer with Harris County, Texas and his job was to write briefs for criminal cases being appealed. I don't know if he handled oral arguments. And this is to the GA Supreme Court. I would expect a specialist. That being said, she did state "I did prepare an order. That order was revised.
Dirty_Mike&the_boys said:
I mean seriously, so what can be the answer here?
Paralegals and interns have been doing my work for years but now I used AI and did not check its work?
Really what are the chances that an attorney who is this sloppy, negligent, or dishonest enough to turn in such bad work is going to completely own this without obfuscation or blame-shifting? I'm thinking the chances are pretty good she's not going to own this alone.
BMX Bandit said:
heres a question for you (and others). what if the case hallucination is correct? does that warrant sanctions? disbarment?
example, lawyer cites a correct proposition of law that is not really disputed, but the case is made up.
" Asking for plausible grounds to infer an agreement does not impose a probability requirement at the pleading stage; it simply calls for enough fact to raise a reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence" Elko v. Kiffin, 380 F.Supp3d 150 (S.D. Tex. 2025).
this is obviously not a good practice and AI cites should always be checked for accuracy, but what punishment does this crime warrant?
on another note, if lawyers aren't using AI in their practice, they are falling way behind their competitors.
aggiehawg said:
How much do you charge for the work AI is doing and how? Time spent in ten minute intervals like you would a human clerk or paralegal?
BMX Bandit said:
i agree with all you said in principal.
but the quote I gave is from a supreme court case, Twombly its not in dispute that is that is the law. you would never need a string cite for something so basic. you arent trying to convince the judge to apply it to you case, he already is going to be doing so
Queso1 said:
Doubtful anything serious will happen to her. Some people go through life being the tallest midget. In another thread I addressed the lack of seriousness in our leaders, but this is a problem across society.
I'm not sure if "seriousness" is the right word. Maybe it's that so many people just don't care anymore. I cannot put my finger on it. There's just something missing. It's like the nurses that do the dance videos. Or the politicians ****ing all the time. There's no pride. No philosophy. No attention to style. From the moron store clerk on their phone during customer interactions to this clown - something is off.
It's cultural rot and I am having a difficult time to really define it. It's like I see it, but I can't develop my thoughts on it.
I think one big issue is doing stuff solely for the money or the result. My philosophy is to do stuff for the sake of doing it, not the money…not the perfect product. Those things come from doing it right, but they shouldn't be the point.
I try to mentor my younger employees on this. I tell them, the system is set up where we really don't have to get out of bed in the morning. Why do we do it? Because there is virtue in work. There is virtue in focusing on your work. Phoning it in using AI really irritates something deep down in my life philosophy.
aggiehawg said:
How much do you charge for the work AI is doing and how? Time spent in ten minute intervals like you would a human clerk or paralegal?
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I plugged those records into Claude, and got back a 16 page summary of everything I could possibly need to know. Reading that and making my own notes took about a hour which was billed to the client noting that it was AI analysis. then I drafted a letter telling client key liability issues, my own thoughts, and provided those pages of the record, which took about two hours.
BMX Bandit said:aggiehawg said:
How much do you charge for the work AI is doing and how? Time spent in ten minute intervals like you would a human clerk or paralegal?
I don't charge for time the AI spends creating it, nor should anyone.
I'll give you a recent example.
had a new case come in where a patient gave notice to sue a nursing home client and requested records. no details on the claim. it is 15,000 pages of records.
in the olden days (six months ago), you'd have a legal nurse consultant review those records, create a timeline, find all the potential liability points, and then let your client know in 6-8 weeks what the case may or may not be about.
I plugged those records into Claude, and got back a 16 page summary of everything I could possibly need to know. Reading that and making my own notes took about a hour which was billed to the client noting that it was AI analysis. then I drafted a letter telling client key liability issues, my own thoughts, and provided those pages of the record, which took about two hours.
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I haven't done this demo yet, but they have a real-time AI assistant add on that will analyze the deposition testimony for your real time at the deposition and suggest further cross examination questions. That's insane.
Aggie Jurist said:Quote:
I haven't done this demo yet, but they have a real-time AI assistant add on that will analyze the deposition testimony for your real time at the deposition and suggest further cross examination questions. That's insane.
We have been evaluating in-house tools, but they are changing so fast, evaluations are difficult.
I'm concerned we are taking away human judgement at a speed we cannot absorb.
Consider that the dumbest people you know are repeatedly being told "You're absolutely right!" by LLMs.
— Jameson Lopp (@lopp) March 23, 2026
More lawyers misusing AI (Westlaw's CoCounsel):
— Rob Freund (@RobertFreundLaw) April 3, 2026
6th Cir. opinion today focuses on criminal defense attorney who "used artificial intelligence to draft the briefs in this case and then filed them without properly verifying the cited legal authorities."
"The first tell" that AI… pic.twitter.com/6Z70CIq5sZ
CanyonAg77 said:
So, how likely is it that these fake cases came from Google or AI, and no one checked them?