Current:Home > FinanceMichael Cohen says he unwittingly sent AI-generated fake legal cases to his attorney -Golden Summit Finance
Michael Cohen says he unwittingly sent AI-generated fake legal cases to his attorney
View
Date:2025-04-27 11:47:02
NEW YORK — Michael Cohen, Donald Trump's onetime personal lawyer and fixer, says he unwittingly passed along to his attorney bogus artificial intelligence-generated legal case citations he got online before they were submitted to a judge.
Cohen made the admission in a court filing unsealed Friday in Manhattan federal court after a judge earlier this month asked a lawyer to explain how court rulings that do not exist were cited in a motion submitted on Cohen's behalf. Judge Jesse Furman had also asked what role, if any, Cohen played in drafting the motion.
The AI-generated cases were cited as part of written arguments attorney David M. Schwartz made to try to bring an early end to Cohen's court supervision after he served more than a year behind bars. Cohen had pleaded guilty in 2018 to tax evasion, campaign finance charges and lying to Congress, saying Trump directed him to arrange the payment of hush money to a porn actor and to a former Playboy model to fend off damage to his 2016 presidential bid.
Cohen, who was disbarred five years ago, said in a declaration submitted to the judge on Thursday that he found the citations by doing research through Google Bard and was unaware that the service could generate nonexistent cases. He said he uses the internet for research because he no longer has access to formal legal-research sources.
"As a non-lawyer, I have not kept up with emerging trends (and related risks) in legal technology and did not realize that Google Bard was a generative text service that, like Chat-GPT, could show citations and descriptions that looked real but actually were not," Cohen said. "Instead, I understood it to be a super-charged search engine and had repeatedly used it in other contexts to (successfully) find accurate information online."
Google rolled out Bard earlier this year as an answer to ChatGPT, which Microsoft has been integrating into its Bing search engine. The tools can quickly generate text based off prompts from a user, but have a tendency to make things up, also known as "hallucinations."
Cohen blames his lawyer for failing to check legal citations
Cohen blamed Schwartz, his lawyer and longtime friend, for failing to check the validity of his citations before submitting them to the judge, though he asked that the judge dispense mercy toward Schwartz, calling his failure to check the citations an "honest mistake" and "a product of inadvertence, not any intent to deceive."
In a declaration filed with the court, Schwartz said he thought drafts of the papers to be submitted to the judge to dissolve Cohen's probation early were reviewed by E. Danya Perry, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice who also represents Cohen. He said he never reviewed what he thought was another attorney's research.
Perry, who discovered that the cited cases were bogus after seeing the court filing, said Schwartz's claim that he came to "believe" that the citations came from Perry were "incorrect and I believe, far-fetched, as I had no involvement in any back-and-forth — not directly with Mr. Schwartz or his paralegal and not even indirectly through Mr. Cohen."
When she learned of them, Perry reported the false case citations to the judge and federal prosecutors.
In her submission to the judge, Perry wrote, "Mr. Cohen engaged in no misconduct and should not suffer any collateral damage from Mr. Schwartz's misstep."
Judge notes fake AI-generated citations have surfaced before
In discussing possible sanctions earlier this month, the judge noted that it was the second time this year that a judge in Manhattan federal court has confronted lawyers over fake citations generated by artificial intelligence. Two lawyers in an unrelated case were fined $5,000 for citing bogus cases that were invented by ChatGPT, the AI-powered chatbot.
In entering the 2018 guilty plea, Cohen did not name the two women who received hush money or even Trump, recounting instead that he worked with an "unnamed candidate" to influence the 2016 election. But the amounts and the dates lined up with $130,000 paid to porn actor Stormy Daniels and $150,000 that went to Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal to buy their silence in the weeks and months leading up to the presidential election, which Trump, a Republican, won over Hillary Clinton, a Democrat. Daniels and McDougal claimed to have had affairs with Trump, which he denied.
Earlier this year, Trump pleaded not guilty in New York state court in Manhattan to 34 felony charges alleging that he falsified internal business records at his private company to coverup his involvement in the payouts.
After his arrest, Trump said in a speech, "This fake case was brought only to interfere with the upcoming 2024 election and it should be dropped immediately."
He has since pleaded not guilty to charges in three other criminal cases.
veryGood! (428)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Dutch political leaders campaign on final day before general election that will usher in new leader
- Niger’s junta asks West Africa’s court to compel neighbors to lift coup sanctions, citing hardship
- UnitedHealth uses faulty AI to deny elderly patients medically necessary coverage, lawsuit claims
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- NFL’s look changing as more women move into prominent roles at teams across league
- Black Friday deals start early and seem endless. Are there actually any good deals?
- J Balvin Reveals What Happened at Dinner With Britney Spears
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- California can share gun owners’ personal information with researchers, appeals court rules
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Words fail us, and this writer knows it. How she is bringing people to the (grammar) table
- Gun battles in Mexican city of Cuernavaca leave 9 dead, including 2 police, authorities say
- The Washington Post is suing to overturn a Florida law shielding Gov. Ron DeSantis' travel records
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Kentucky cut off her Medicaid over a clerical error — just days before her surgery
- As much as 1.1 million gallons of oil leaked from pipeline near Louisiana, Coast Guard says
- Padres give Mike Shildt another chance to manage 2 years after his Cardinals exit
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
IRS delays reporting rules for users of Venmo, Cash App and other payment apps
Banksy revealed his first name in a lost interview recorded 20 years ago
Abortion access protection, assault weapons ban to be heard in Virginia’s 2024 legislative session
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Iowa official’s wife convicted of 52 counts of voter fraud in ballot-stuffing scheme
Deaths from gold mine collapse in Suriname rise to 14, with 7 people still missing
A vehicle rams into a victory celebration for Liberia’s president-elect, killing 2 and injuring 18