Pinsent Masons Self-Reports to SRA After Junior Lawyer Used AI to Generate Fabricated Law in Court Letters, as London Judge Declines to Initiate Contempt Proceedings
Pinsent Masons has referred itself to the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) after one of its junior lawyers used artificial intelligence to generate fictitious legal citations that were then included in letters sent to court. A London judge, on being informed of the incident, declined to initiate contempt of court proceedings. The self-referral is a significant act of regulatory transparency from a Magic Circle-adjacent firm. Proactive engagement with the SRA — reporting the incident before being required to do so — is consistent with the obligations on regulated entities to cooperate with their regulator and may be a factor the SRA weighs in deciding how to respond. The firm's decision to self-report also reflects a broader awareness that AI-generated hallucinations (fabricated legal references produced by AI tools that present false information as real) represent a professional conduct risk requiring immediate escalation when discovered. The incident at Pinsent Masons mirrors a pattern seen in other jurisdictions — most notably in the US, where several firms have faced sanctions after AI-generated citations were submitted to federal courts — but this appears to be one of the first instances of a UK firm taking the formal step of self-reporting an AI misuse incident to the SRA. The London judge's decision not to initiate contempt proceedings suggests the court was satisfied by the firm's corrective response, though any SRA investigation and its outcome remain pending.
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