I'm not even a lawyer, but uh...
I'm not even a lawyer, but uh...
Here’s Mr. Lundsford’s declaration in full, you can read it for yourself storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.us...
“In any event, Mr. Lunsford made clear that performing (or verifying) legal research for each case is not something that he requires of the team he leads.” Y’ALL.
That is definitely a choice. As a programmer, I always always always double check AI-generated code, but I'm sure it's not as important when it's only someone's freedom on the line.
“According to Mr. Lunsford's own testimony, he did not make any effort to verify the contents of the motion to compel before authorizing its filing, and it would have been extremely unusual for him to do so.” Damn, your Honor, I didn’t know you could cook
This sounds like the standard process - I've never heard of a senior signing lawyer personally verifying the contents of a motion. That said, the signing lawyer should still face discipline - that's the point of the signature, and he should have set up protections to prevent this kind of thing.
It’s not the standard process where I work, I can tell you that.
Huh, are you at a firm or gov/nonprofit? Seems like a hard sell to get a client to pay partner rates for cite checking, but it would certainly prevent this kind of failure.
(to be clear I've worked in gov and the signing attorneys weren't cite checking there either, but it might be more feasible in gov than at a firm)
Firm. It doesn’t take *that* much time to verify that the case exists, tbh.
It can, depending on the number and type of filings the partner is signing. But I don't have any issue with having the signing lawyer cite check if the client will pay for it. My problem is with the judge's implicit assumption that it's per unreasonable to trust the person you delegated to.
I think it’s not that it’s unreasonable, it’s that if that doesn’t work out, the responsibility should flow upwards not downwards.
Absolutely. You sign the brief, you're subject to discipline.
“Indifference,” “complete personal disinterest,” and “utter disregard for the truth.” Only the best for the Alabama Department of Corrections!
The court does not approve either of Mr. Lundsford’s attempts to “leave the mess for someone else” nor his “explanation in greater fullness of how very little work he personally puts in to be sure that his team's motions tell the truth”
Mr. Lundsford, by the by, “remains the Attorney General’s counsel of choice.”
of course he does!
But not in this case! Mr. Lundsford has been disqualified from representing the ADOC further in this matter, along with the other referenced attorneys, and has been referred to the Alabama Bar. May they have the courage to do what the Attorney General apparently will not.
AI hallucinations in legal briefs typically look like the exact case you want. In civil litigation, that is absolute gold. If this dude even perused the briefs, he would have been excited to read those cases and would have asked for a copy of them. Just that would have solved this. Dumb dumb dumb.
Not sure if I should go with a "please shut up" gif or a gif about bad lawyering. This is very much saying you couldn't have committed the murder because you were doing a bankrobbery in another state that day.