Tag: divorce technology

Artificial Intelligence and Professional Responsibility

Family lawyers are becoming early adopters of Artificial Intelligence, and we are facing new challenges to our professional responsibility. My new article in the Florida Bar Commentator examines how generative AI forces lawyers to expand the traditional duties of candor, confidentiality, and competence to include this new relationship we have with our non-human assistants.

AI Law

Generative AI is a subset of a much broader world of AI, which focuses on creating the text, images, and music we use in our practice and personal lives. Generative AI systems, like Claude and ChatGPT, are the best-known subset of Artificial Intelligence.

AI is evolving rapidly. In February 2019, when OpenAI released GPT-2, it could barely count to five, and threw insults at users. A mere four years later, Stanford Law School administered the Uniform Bar Exam to GPT-4, and it passed the multiple-choice portion of the exam, the written portion, and scored in the 90th percentile overall.

The 2023 Future Ready Lawyer Report showed that seventy-six percent of legal professionals in corporate legal departments and sixty-eight percent of law firms use generative AI at least once a week.

Along those lines, eighty-five percent of law firm lawyers and eighty-four percent of in-house lawyers say they expect to make greater use of technology to improve productivity. So what could go wrong?

A lot can go wrong with AI. So much can go wrong that the Florida Bar has issued Ethics Opinion 24-1. An easy mistake to make is with confidentiality. Before uploading your clients’ confidential information into an AI chatbot, review your AI system’s privacy policies. Avoid uploading any client information unless the AI platform encrypts your data.

Lawyers who rely on generative AI for research, drafting, communication, and client intake have the same responsibilities, and face many of the same risks, when relying on paralegals and assistants. A 2024 study of general-purpose chatbots found that AI models hallucinated as much as eighty-two percent of the time on legal queries.

Ultimately, a lawyer is responsible for the work product that their nonlawyer assistants and AI programs create. This is true regardless of whether that work product was originally drafted or researched by a nonlawyer or an AI program.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas recently published a paper hoping to alleviate concerns that AI will become our evil overlords. Unfortunately, the Federal Reserve Bank’s paper admitted that, under some scenarios:

“AI eventually surpasses human intelligence, the machines become malevolent, and this eventually leads to human extinction.”

The article is available from the Florida Bar Family Law Section Website here.

Using AI and Divorce

Lawyers and non-lawyers alike, are increasingly using AI in their divorce cases and ending up in trouble. One Atlanta divorce lawyer who repeatedly cited to phony legal cases in her client’s divorce papers found out that using AI in your divorce can badly harm your case.

AI Divorce Lawyer2

Deus Ex Machina

Generative AI is saving lawyers time and money, but if used improperly, it could cost them their livelihoods. Generative AI is a type of AI model that creates new content, such as text, images, or music, based on large amounts of training data.

Examples for text include OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Microsoft’s Copilot, Google’s Gemini, Meta’s Llama, and Anthropic’s Claude, and for images ChatGPT, Gemini, Adobe and Midjourney. A generative AI model that is text-based is called a large language model.

But here’s the thing. When given a question or prompt, AI uses learned patterns to predict the best outputs, such as your motion or brief. Training a generative AI model takes months because of the enormous amounts of data and the neural network’s process of learning and optimization.

Generative AI is impressive but not perfect. AI predictions are just suggestions, and they can be wrong.

Atlanta divorce lawyer, Diana Lynch, is reported to have drafted an order a judge signed in May 2024 that referenced two cases that don’t exist. Lynch’s client filed for divorce in April 2022 and received a divorce decree in July of that year.

In October 2023, the ex-wife asked the county judge to reopen the case and set aside the divorce decree, claiming she had moved to Texas in 2021 and had not been properly served with the complaint. The judge denied the ex-wife’s request in a three-page order in May 2024.

But then the ex-wife’s appealed, and she pointed out the trial judge relied on two fake cases in her order denying her motion, rendering the order void.

Florida Bar and AI Use

I have written about computer and high tech issues in divorce before. Florida was the first state to issue an ethics opinion regarding the use of AI. To ensure client confidentiality, you should confirm that you maintain ownership of any uploaded data, learn how to delete your data, and review the AI provider’s license terms or representations regarding confidentiality.

Free AI models use your questions and uploaded documents to train future models. To maintain client confidentiality, you will need a paid subscription.

U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts warned in his 2023 report on the judiciary that commonly used AI applications can be prone to “hallucinations,” causing lawyers to submit briefs citing fake cases, the Georgia judges said. Hallucinations arise when an AI model generates incorrect or nonsensical information and they are factually inaccurate.

Her

On appeal. a three judge panel on the court of appeals in Georgia found that Ms. Lynch was not deterred when she was accused by her client’s ex-wife of making up case law references. In fact, she filed a response citing 11 cases that were also either fake or irrelevant.

“The irregularities in these filings suggest that they were drafted using generative AI. We are troubled by the citation of bogus cases in the trial court’s order.”

The judges said it might be the first time a Georgia appeals court has confronted the problems that can flow from a lawyer’s apparent use of artificial intelligence that generates content. They said other courts have tackled the issue. They also said Lynch added insult to injury by requesting attorney fees in relation to the ex-wife’s appeal and even used a phony case to support the request.

The judges imposed the maximum penalty on Lynch for her “frivolous” bid for attorney fees. They sent the case back to the DeKalb County judge to reconsider the ex-wife’s request to set aside the divorce decree. Their opinion references a study by Stanford researchers, who found generative AI models, including ChatGPT, “hallucinate” around 75% of the time when answering questions about a court’s core ruling.

The article is here.

Speaking at the Family Courthouse

What an honor to speak at the Family Division Courthouse Lunch & Learn series, co-hosted by Family Court Services and the First Family Law Inn of Court. The discussion, attended by family law attorneys judicial officers, and professionals, was on the new technological changes that impact everyone in family court, in addition to the annual Town Hall presented by the Honorable Judge Scott Bernstein.

Family Law

Family Law Technology

Technology is constantly changing our lives, and may times for the better! The Eleventh Judicial Circuit is rolling out “courtMAP” this month. CourtMap is a new online Management and Access Platform that combines eCourtesy with online scheduling, online notification/confirmation, and allows judges to create and e-File orders. courtMAP also allows parties to self-schedule their case events – motion calendar, special sets, and trials – and attach the documentation previously submitted via eCourtesy.

Family Court Services and Kidside

KidSide, Inc., has been developed to raise and secure funds to provide the best possible services and facilities to the children of Miami-Dade County who have suffered through the conflict of their parents’ divorce or other litigation in the Family and Domestic Violence Courts. By working with Family Court Services, a unit of the Miami-Dade County Eleventh Circuit Court, Family Division, KidSide strives to ensure that the best interests of the children are considered by parents and the Court.

More information about Kidside is available here.