UK Judge Slams Lawyers for Fake AI Citations—Now Facing Legal Reckoning
British courts aren't buying the 'AI-made-me-do-it' defense. A UK judge just torched attorneys caught using fabricated AI-generated legal references—threatening sanctions that could derail careers.
When algorithms replace due diligence: The legal profession's latest embarrassment spotlights the dark side of generative AI hype. Turns out, even officers of the court aren't immune to ChatGPT's hallucination problem.
Bonus finance jab: At least they didn't try to pass off AI-generated citations as 'tokenized legal NFTs' on some dodgy blockchain—that bubble already burst.
Lawyer Hussain cites non-existent cases in $120M case
Lawyers, beware: The Dangers of Using AI to Draft Submissions Without Verification
In the Al-Haroun case, the court uncovered a staggering 45 citations that were either non-existent or contained inaccurate quotations. Shockingly, these false citations were originally generated… pic.twitter.com/CbgNy1z7X1
— Lawpoint Uganda (@Lawpointuganda) June 7, 2025
Lawyer Abid Hussain cited non-existent cases in a $120 million (£89M) lawsuit regarding an alleged breach of a financing agreement with Qatar National Bank. Hussain submitted a filing with 45 citations, out of which 18 did not exist, while many others did not contain the quotations that were attributed to them.
The client, Hamad Al-Haroun, apologized for unintentionally misleading the court with false data from publicly available AI tools and said he was responsible rather than his lawyer, Hussain. But Sharp said it was “extraordinary” that the lawyer relied on the client for the accuracy of their legal research rather than the other way around.
Judge Sharp, the president of the King’s bench division, said there were serious implications for the administration of justice and public confidence in the justice system if AI was misused. She added that lawyers misusing AI could face public admonishment and referral to the police. She called on the Bar Council and the Law Society to consider steps to curb the problem “as a matter of urgency.”
The judge also asked heads of barristers’ chambers and managing partners of lawyers to ensure all lawyers understood their professional and ethical duties when using AI.
“The responses may make confident assertions that are simply untrue. They may cite sources that do not exist. They may purport to quote passages from a genuine source that do not appear in that source.”
–Judge Victoria Sharp, President of the King’s Bench Division
Ian Jeffery, the Chief Executive of the Law Society of England and Wales, said the ruling laid bare the dangers of using AI in legal work. He added that AI tools were increasingly used to support legal service delivery. Still, the real risk of incorrect outputs produced by generative AI requires lawyers to check, review, and ensure the accuracy of their work.
Advocate Forey cites five fake cases in a tenant’s housing claim
Barrister Sarah Forey cited five fake cases in a tenant’s housing claim against the London Borough of Haringey. Forey denied using AI, but Sharp said she had not provided the court with a coherent explanation for what happened.
The judge also warned that offering false material as genuine might be considered contempt of court or, in “the most egregious cases,” perverting the course of justice. She added that this could lead to severe penalties for lawyers who did not comply with their professional obligations.
Sharp said Forey showed a worrying lack of insight, adding that the court did not accept that a lack of access to textbooks or electronic subscription services within chambers, if that was the position, provided anything more than marginal mitigation.
She asserted that Forey could have checked the cases she cited by searching the National Archives caselaw website or by going to the law library of her Inn of Court. Sharp observed that Forey must have deliberately included fake citations or used AI despite denying it in her witness statement.
Last month, Justice Ritchie said that, in citing five fake cases, the behavior of Forey, then a pupil at 3 Bolt Court, and the lawyers at Haringey Law Centre in London was improper, unreasonable, and negligent. He also ordered all of them to pay wasted costs.
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