The Case That Wasn’t

A repository of cases of ‘AI Hallucinations’ in Common Law Courtrooms around the world

Virtuosity Legal’s Research Team presents the first-of-its kind Repository tracking AI Hallucinations in Common Law Courtrooms around the world. The extensive use of Artificial Intelligence has led to mishaps, where the courts have discovered fake and fictitious case law citations filed before them. This database is a timely and urgent caution: AI may accelerate work, but it cannot replace legal research, ethical responsibility, or professional scrutiny.

Because substance, authority, and insight cannot be automated.

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“Talks of gains in efficiency and productivity by using tools such ChatGPT and Google Gemini are overshadowed by the myriad negative impacts of AI tools on information ecosystems, environmental issues as well as issues related to labour exploitation in building AI datasets and data privacy issues.”

The Report and The Repository

The Bi-Annual report is a 6 month’s compilation of the repository that is updated and maintained regularly by Research and Content Team,Virtuosity Legal. The report is updated on a regular basis. Think we missed a case? Report It Here

Documented Hallucinations

A curated record of verified instances where AI-generated content entered common law courtrooms as fabricated or erroneous legal material.

Jurisdictional Mapping

Tracks how AI hallucinations have surfaced across different common law jurisdictions, enabling comparative legal analysis.

Judicial Responses

Examines how courts have reacted to AI-generated errors, from judicial warnings to procedural consequences and sanctions.

Patterns & Risks

Identifies recurring trends in AI hallucinations, highlighting systemic risks in legal research, drafting, and advocacy.

Research & Accountability

Designed as a reference point for scholars, lawyers, and policymakers studying AI reliability, ethics, and legal accountability.

Built for Citation

The repository maintains a verified record of AI hallucinations suitable for academic reference and policy research.