When a lawyer messes up by using an AI platform that produces mistakes, they might get sanctioned by a judge. When a judge messes up using an AI platform, “it could become precedent. So, it’s a much different conversation.” Judge Scott Schlegel, of Louisiana's Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, speaks from his experience as an early leader in courtroom efficiency. Today, he supports a measured judicial approach to AI with this guiding principle: “It's not our job to be first. It's our job to get it right.” Tune in to this conversation with hosts Todd Smith and Jody Sanders to hear about his newer project: the Judicial AI Consortium (JAIC), which he is developing with U.S. Magistrate Judge Maritza Dominguez Braswell of Colorado and Judge Xavier Rodriguez of the Western District of Texas. The consortium is designed to be a simple forum where judges can “ask stupid questions, talk to each other about how you're using it, what you're seeing out there. Is it helpful? Is it useful? How far should we go?” About 200 judges around the country have signed up so far.
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Welcome to the Texas
Appellate Law Podcast,
Speaker:the show that takes you inside the
Texas and federal appellate systems.
Speaker:Through conversations with judges, court
staff, top trial and appellate lawyers,
Speaker:academics, and innovators,
Speaker:we provide practical insights to help
you become a more effective advocate.
Speaker:Whether you're handling
appeals or preparing for trial,
Speaker:you'll discover strategies to sharpen
your arguments, innovate your practice,
Speaker:and stay ahead of the latest developments.
And now, here are your hosts,
Speaker:Todd Smith and Jodi Sanders.
Produced and powered by LawPods.
Speaker:Welcome back to the Texas Appellate
Law Podcast. I'm Todd Smith.
Speaker:And I'm Jody Sanders.
Speaker:Our guest for this episode is Judge
Scott Schlegel from Louisiana's Fifth
Speaker:Circuit Court of Appeal.
Welcome to the podcast, Judge.
Speaker:Thanks for having me, Todd
and Jodi. Good to be here.
Speaker:We were just joking offline.
Speaker:This is worth a brief mention that the
name of your court is a little confusing
Speaker:to those of us from Texas who practice
in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals,
Speaker:also in your town,
Speaker:also other courts in our state or courts
of appeals and not court of appeals,
Speaker:but I wanted to make sure we had that
correct, the Circuit Court of Appeal.
Speaker:How long have you been in
office on that court now, Judge?
Speaker:Going on three years.
Speaker:I was on the trial court for a little
a decade and elected here in: Speaker:Right. I do want to kind of give our
listeners a chance to get to know you.
Speaker:So if you wouldn't mind just
kind of introducing yourself,
Speaker:giving a little bit of your background
and give a brief synopsis of what got you
Speaker:to your current position.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I was actually a financial advisor
during the late '90s when the
Speaker:market went south for about 10 years.
So my wife looked at me and said,
Speaker:"You should go to law school."
So I actually went to law
school at night while I
Speaker:was a financial advisor by day. And
then once I graduated law school,
Speaker:became a downtown lawyer doing products,
liability defense, civil products,
Speaker:liability defense. I always joke, made
great money and wasn't for me. So I
Speaker:became a prosecutor,
Speaker:made no money and loved life and
enjoyed my time prosecuting cases.
Speaker:It's a great job. It's a tough job.
Speaker:We see some pretty terrible
things as a prosecutor.
Speaker:And so I did that for about five
years and just lived and breathed the
Speaker:courtroom. And the inefficiencies
literally drove me crazy.
Speaker:I couldn't understand
it. So I quit my job,
Speaker:took out a major medical cash out of 401k.
My son was in school,
Speaker:my wife was in school, and I ran
for a judge and thankfully won.
Speaker:And since day one, it has always been,
Speaker:what can I do to make the justice
system more efficient, effective,
Speaker:and accessible? And in my estimation,
Speaker:that is using simple off-the-shelf
technologies to do things a little bit
Speaker:better. I always say,
run your business better.
Speaker:We're not talking about human judgment.
Speaker:We're not talking about replacing judges.
Speaker:We're just talking about the business
side of it and how I can make it a more
Speaker:efficient practice. So when I was on the
trial court, the first thing I did was,
Speaker:you know that big red book
that every minute clerk has?
Speaker:And in order to get a hearing,
Speaker:you have to call the minute clerk
and hope that they call you back.
Speaker:Or you have to send a runner to get a
date and it drove me crazy. So I took the
Speaker:big red book, tossed it in the
trash, put my calendar online,
Speaker:allowed lawyers to pick their
own dates, call opposing counsel,
Speaker:make sure it works for everybody.
Speaker:I sent you text and email reminders
with a Zoom link before Zoom was a word.
Speaker:That cost 150 bucks a year.
Speaker:And that's just one simple example to
modernize the justice system and just make
Speaker:the process better.
Speaker:So when you got on the bench, was
it a general jurisdiction court?
Speaker:Was it criminal?
Speaker:Yep. Handled criminal, civil, domestic,
Speaker:and then I also built a
couple of specialty courts.
Speaker:So then I ran a reentry court and a
switch and certain probation program.
Speaker:So at any given time,
Speaker:over a hundred and some odd probationers
and specialty courts that I was
Speaker:managing as well.
Speaker:Wow, that's cool. So how early
did you start Zoom? I mean,
Speaker:I know a lot of people picked
it up for the pandemic.
Speaker:2014. Wow. I mean, I was elected in 2013.
Speaker:So that online calendar started
in: Speaker:shelf products. Before AI
was a thing, my speech was,
Speaker:I can modernize a justice system for
under $1,000 a year in any jurisdiction in
Speaker:under 30 days and I'll do it for you. Wow.
Speaker:And I have no coding skills whatsoever.
Speaker:Well, that's really, I mean,
it sounds like you went in,
Speaker:I don't want to say
really shook things up,
Speaker:but my curiosity's getting
the better of me now.
Speaker:And I'm curious about how your peers
on the trial bench responded to your
Speaker:blazing the trail technologically.
Speaker:Look, judges are people
just like lawyers or people.
Speaker:If you're in a firm and you go to the
senior leadership, some of them are in,
Speaker:some of them are not
today, not tomorrow, never.
Speaker:And so you've got all of
that. And so the beauty of,
Speaker:and one of the reasons I ran for judge
to begin with is the beauty is if you are
Speaker:the judge and you run your courtroom how
you want to run your courtroom. I mean,
Speaker:people can't tell me no.
Speaker:And so I was able to modernize my
own chambers and then those who were
Speaker:interested, I would help them.
Those who were not interested,
Speaker:there are 99 problems and that's not
one of them. And I just need your votes.
Speaker:Hey, you don't need to do it,
Speaker:but I need your votes to get the budgets
to do these things. And like I said,
Speaker:it doesn't cost that much money.
So it really wasn't an issue.
Speaker:And I say how easy it
is, but it's not easy.
Speaker:And we all know how difficult it is.
Change management is very difficult.
Speaker:But you can tell me no
today, but I'll outlast you.
Speaker:How did that go? I know in Texas
when people jumped to Zoom,
Speaker:it was by necessity in the pandemic. And
then as things started to open back up,
Speaker:there was some kind of conflicts between
what the civil procedure rules allowed
Speaker:and what courts were
doing. How did that work?
Speaker:Were you able to kind of navigate the
rules and manage to set everything up
Speaker:pretty easily or did you run
into some conflicts there?
Speaker:Yeah. So I mean, prior to the
pandemic, and we'll use that example,
Speaker:I used it for pretrial conferences,
the hey, how you doing?
Speaker:Why are y'all driving two hours and paying
for parking when you can just jump on
Speaker:a Zoom or just say, "Hey, how you
doing? Where are we discovery?
Speaker:Have you deposed X, Y, and Z? Have you
issued propounded discovery requests?
Speaker:Where are we on that? " I mean,
Speaker:I never understood why you
would drive to court to do it.
Speaker:And I know why as a trial court judge,
Speaker:because that was your time to meet your
opponent as opposed to just picking up
Speaker:the phone and doing it. You
use chambers as a meeting site.
Speaker:And so the rules weren't an
issue for pretrial conferences.
Speaker:For hearings, we weren't having
motion hearings since: Speaker:It was typically for pretrial conferences.
Speaker:And we already had remote
witness testimony rules in
the civil procedure. I'm
Speaker:sure Texas did as well. There
were some nuances to it.
Speaker:So as the pandemic continued,
Speaker:we certainly went and modified the
rules of civil procedure statutorily,
Speaker:worked with legislators and lawyers and
got the rules for criminal and civil the
Speaker:way we thought that we needed them.
Speaker:So certainly there were some legislative
changes that need to be made post
Speaker:pandemic. But again, when
you're dealing with a pandemic,
Speaker:the constitution trumps every local
rule and every civil procedure that rule
Speaker:that exists.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:people certainly became more open-minded
during the pandemic about how to get
Speaker:things done. And so at least now
everybody knows what Zoom is.
Speaker:And so maybe you're
still a tech evangelist,
Speaker:but you don't seem like maybe you're so
far out there anymore that the things
Speaker:that you rolled out to the
trial court. After you left,
Speaker:I want to get into your current position
a little more, but after you left,
Speaker:have the changes that you made
stuck in the district court?
Speaker:For the most part. There were
other things for criminal.
Speaker:We integrated text and email reminders
right into the case management system to
Speaker:cut down on failures to appear.
Speaker:And that still exists because it's
got baked into the way we did things.
Speaker:Obviously,
Speaker:judges have their own opinions on whether
or not hearings should be held via
Speaker:Zoom or not.
Speaker:We actually had a legislator
passed a law that essentially
Speaker:says that you can opt in on the front
end and the judge has to allow you to
Speaker:attend virtually unless there's good
cause why not to. So they did the whole,
Speaker:the reverse on it to kind of
manage those issues. And look,
Speaker:you said I'm a tech
evangelist. That's true,
Speaker:but it's more of the justice system.
Speaker:And so I tried horrific murders and child
rapes and all these terrible things.
Speaker:And the best thing to do is walk up to
a jury and hand a photograph and not try
Speaker:and show it on the big screen up there.
So tech for tech's sake is not what I
Speaker:do.
Speaker:Technology to advance justice
is what I propose and what I'm
Speaker:a proponent of. And sometimes, like
I said, no tech is the right answer.
Speaker:Did you find improvements in things like
non-appearances and people that were
Speaker:pro se being able to navigate? Did
you see that impact pretty quickly?
Speaker:Oh, absolutely. Again, once I did
it for civil, it was the same $150.
Speaker:I flipped it to the criminal. I didn't
give them the opportunity to pick dates,
Speaker:but I would say, "You're hereby
ordered to appear on this date.
Speaker:What time would you like
to come? Nine, 10 or 11.
Speaker:I got 100 on my criminal docket. I
can't hear a hundred cases at 9:00 AM.
Speaker:So why am I making a hundred people
come to my courtroom and cause mayhem?
Speaker:You might have to take the bus, you might
have to drop your kids off at school,
Speaker:you might have to bum a ride. Tell
me what time you want to come.
Speaker:You're coming on this day,
Speaker:but tell me what time you come." And
when they would make that selection,
Speaker:I would then have them sit down at
the computer and put their name and
Speaker:everything in there. And then I would
send them text and email reminders to cut
Speaker:down on failures to appear.
Speaker:And those emails would also include
the phone numbers of all the public
Speaker:defenders that were
assigned to our division.
Speaker:It would include all the different
forms that they may or may not need.
Speaker:So it was an information,
Speaker:it was pointing to a website that I
built using Squarespace for 300 bucks.
Speaker:And I just had a page for everything.
If you were in this probation,
Speaker:you had this page. If you
had this, you had this page.
Speaker:All the information that you needed was
there. Use it to reduce the barriers.
Speaker:Once you reduce the barriers, look,
no more excuses. You decide, I decide,
Speaker:and I've provided you the information.
Speaker:Did you, I don't want to
call it client feedback,
Speaker:but you get the idea where I can
imagine that in terms of user
Speaker:satisfaction, so to speak,
Speaker:that those arrangements in your
court when you're on the trial bench,
Speaker:it had to make it just that much
better for the participants.
Speaker:Did you get feedback like that from
the folks that appeared before you?
Speaker:I mean, colloquially, yes. I
mean, I didn't send out a survey.
Speaker:How was your experience today? Well, you
put me in jail, so I wasn't too good.
Speaker:Or you ruled against my
client. I hate Judge Lagel.
Speaker:I don't know what that looks like,
Speaker:but certainly I think lawyers were
appreciative of the ability to look at the
Speaker:calendar online and find a date that
worked for everybody so they don't have to
Speaker:file motions to continue because no one
can consulted with them about the date
Speaker:that was good for everybody. I
don't want to say I built an app,
Speaker:but I had an app that you could save to
your home screen that was a web-based
Speaker:app and it literally was click
here to schedule the hearing,
Speaker:click here to drag and
drop your courtesy copy,
Speaker:click here for sample jury charges,
Speaker:click here for phone numbers. And you
know where those papers went when you sent
Speaker:me a courtesy copy in the trash.
Speaker:So just drag and drop it on my website
and then I'll be sitting there on a
Speaker:Sunday watching a ballgame and I'm getting
ready for trial because it just hit
Speaker:my iPad.
Speaker:Yeah. I ask you about the
customer satisfaction.
Speaker:It makes me think of another
episode that we did, gosh,
Speaker:probably two years ago now about
procedural justice and the feeling that if
Speaker:people feel like they're heard and that
the judge is listening and treating them
Speaker:fairly, that that makes a big difference
in how they feel about the result.
Speaker:Oh, it absolutely does.
Speaker:Your time's just as important as my time
and I'll never be late. If I'm late,
Speaker:call the cops,
Speaker:something's happened to me because your
time's just as important and you're not
Speaker:going to like every decision I make,
Speaker:but I want you to understand that I
hear you, see you, I've read everything,
Speaker:I'm ready to go and how can I reduce
barriers? No reason to make people ...
Speaker:You always use the DMV example.
Speaker:If you're sitting at the DMV for
three hours when you get to the front,
Speaker:you're just mad and you're not listening
to what they're saying anymore.
Speaker:And we use that with probationers.
Speaker:If the whole point of people in these
drug courts and these specialty courts is
Speaker:to help them get healthy so that there
are no more victims and hold them
Speaker:accountable.
Speaker:And you make them sit for two or three
hours and how are they going to listen to
Speaker:the counselors that are trying to help
them through the issues that they're
Speaker:dealing with?
They're not.
Speaker:So using all of these tools to
build a better DMV enables people to
Speaker:listen. It doesn't remove
who you are, doesn't remove,
Speaker:I'm going to hold you accountable.
It doesn't remove any of that.
Speaker:It's simply a way to help people succeed
in life so that there are no more
Speaker:victims.
Speaker:Well,
Speaker:you spent that decade on the trial bench
and now you've moved on to the Fifth
Speaker:Circuit Court of Appeal and
have been there for a few years.
Speaker:How has that transition gone in terms of
your adjustment to the new environment
Speaker:and assessment of their tech for justice
situation and what have you been able
Speaker:to do or needed to do in
that transition? Yeah.
Speaker:Look, it's a completely different
job. You guys are appellate lawyers.
Speaker:It is a completely different job
than the trial court. And thankfully,
Speaker:I came into a court that had already
built its own case management system for
Speaker:the past 10 or 15 years.
Speaker:So everything was digitized and it's a
phenomenal foundation and a chief and a
Speaker:bench that are interested in
looking for the next iteration.
Speaker:I want to move at the speed of light and
it takes a little time to get everybody
Speaker:to understand and appreciate these
things, but that's good. I mean,
Speaker:that's the way it should be.
It's not our job to be first.
Speaker:It's our job to get it right. And so
some of the ... I wrote this morning,
Speaker:I don't know if y'all saw it,
Speaker:build a frictionless system and then find
out where friction needs to be placed
Speaker:back in. Because when I was starting
out with these gen AI tools,
Speaker:friction was a good thing. It
was good for my inexperience.
Speaker:It prevented me from making errors. It
prevented me from doing things. Now,
Speaker:friction drives me crazy because I
know how to use the tools and I'm like,
Speaker:"Give me my F1 race car that I can go.
Speaker:" But I always joke,
Speaker:the private sector's building
F1 cars for dirt tracks.
Speaker:And so how do we as a
court look at these things?
Speaker:And it should be slower than I want.
Speaker:I'm not saying my way is the right way
because I probably go too fast sometimes.
Speaker:So it's a good thing that
I have colleagues that want
to understand these things
Speaker:before we move forward. And
now, almost three years in,
Speaker:we're looking at an on- prem AI servers
where we can code it and train it and
Speaker:help out with central staff on civil
cases. We'll be able to help out
Speaker:with intake at the clerk's office.
Speaker:Now I'm looking for the budget
to do it and going forward.
Speaker:How does it work in Louisiana
for the appellate courts?
Speaker:Do you kind of have your own,
Speaker:your court has its own
budget and decisions on that
kind of thing, management,
Speaker:or is it handled on a higher state level?
Speaker:No, we're not centralized. Each
court has their own budget.
Speaker:So legislature's in session right now.
The judiciary has put forth its budget.
Speaker:There's a line item for each circuit.
Speaker:We've asked for it and hopefully
we get what we've asked for.
Speaker:We never get all of what we've asked for.
Speaker:And then something pops up where the
boiler goes out and the money that you
Speaker:needed for the AI server
goes, "Scott, it's good.
Speaker:I know you want your AI server,
Speaker:but we're not getting it now because
we have a boiler what we have to fix."
Speaker:Because again, it is a,
Speaker:we are in a building that
we have to manage and hire
clerks and everything else.
Speaker:Well,
Speaker:whenever we talk to a lawyer or a judge
from another jurisdiction who is on the
Speaker:appellate side of things,
I always like to ask,
Speaker:how many circuits in Louisiana
for the courts of appeal? That's.
Speaker:Five.
Speaker:Five. Okay. We have a lot. We have 15.
Speaker:So I always like to compare notes because
I'm fascinated by the states that only
Speaker:have one intermediate court of appeals.
Speaker:Right. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Yeah. Five, that seems like a
pretty good number. We have a lot,
Speaker:which is good for people like me and Jody.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you've made the transition now
fully over the past three years,
Speaker:which just happens to coincide
with the real just blossoming,
Speaker:ballooning up of GenAI being available.
Speaker:So now you can do even more than you
could before in terms of coming up
Speaker:with some innovative strategies for
dealing with cases and your caseload and
Speaker:management and all of that.
And have your colleagues,
Speaker:I know you're kind of taking the reins
it sounds like on some of these projects,
Speaker:but your colleagues have
been receptive, I assume,
Speaker:to the initiatives that you're bringing?
Speaker:Oh yeah. Again, it's a process. It's
a process that you start on day one.
Speaker:There are people that argue
for more than I'm game for,
Speaker:and I push back and say no. So again,
there's always going to be that.
Speaker:So I can say, yes, my colleagues
are supportive, but yes,
Speaker:my colleagues think I'm crazy
at times and that's okay.
Speaker:But I think I do it in a measured
approach. Again, I always,
Speaker:as it relates to these tools,
if you've seen my website,
Speaker:I drafted a guideline for
judges, how to use GenAI tools.
Speaker:And I always start with, hopefully
you're using enterprise level tools.
Speaker:Hopefully you're not using free ChatGPT
or free Claude or free products,
Speaker:but if you're at least using
the pro level $20 versions,
Speaker:here is a guideline to follow.
It's not a tech guideline. It's a,
Speaker:here's how to be careful. Rule one of AI.
Don't use AI.
Speaker:Do your job first. Get a direction,
get a feel, understand the file.
Speaker:Don't just put it into
a GenAI bot and say,
Speaker:"What's the answer?" And so it just
walks you through 10 steps of how to use
Speaker:tools to go through the
iterative drafting process
Speaker:if you decide to use it in a manner
in which it's drafting. And hopefully,
Speaker:again, you're not drafting 30
page opinions using a GenAI tool.
Speaker:That is not what I'm suggesting
or referring to. But again,
Speaker:it's this whole friction thing. It's this,
Speaker:I want you to understand how these tools
work and here is what I have learned
Speaker:and by the way, you already
know how to do this.
Speaker:If you view the tool as a law clerk or
a first year associate or anything else,
Speaker:once you read the steps, you go, "Oh,
Speaker:I get what this is. " You never
rely upon a first year associate
Speaker:for anything. Your central staff memos,
you're going to read them and go,
Speaker:thank you,
Speaker:but you're still going to go do your
job and you're going to walk through it.
Speaker:And so now that the tools are being
baked into the tools that courts
Speaker:already trust, it's a different
argument. So when I first started here,
Speaker:we didn't have the co-councils and
the proteges baked into these Westlaws
Speaker:and Lexuses that we could even afford.
Speaker:And so the previous iteration of
what I tried to build was way too
Speaker:expensive.
Speaker:The tokens cost way too much and there
was just not a comfortable level of using
Speaker:tools that we aren't familiar
with. And so I've always said,
Speaker:until the tools get baked into
the tools that the courts trust,
Speaker:you won't see adoption for the chambers.
Speaker:Now that that's happening with your
Office 365s and Copilots being baked in on
Speaker:enterprise level, with the
proteges and with the co-councils,
Speaker:you're going to start seeing adoption
going forward. And then you have other
Speaker:courts that are going, "I get
it. This is too much friction.
Speaker:It's driving me crazy.
Speaker:Give me the private
sector's version of this
Speaker:tool." And so you're seeing that with
the clear briefs and the learning hands.
Speaker:And this is not me pushing any
products. I'm just talking out loud.
Speaker:The enterprise level co-count, I mean
Claude, enterprise level ChatGPT,
Speaker:enterprise level Gemini. All
of these things are the next,
Speaker:and I'm not saying it's next iteration,
Speaker:but it drops some of that and enables
you to do more than necessarily
Speaker:some of the friction tools. And
that's the way it should be.
Speaker:I always joke that you should have to
level up before you touch the next tool.
Speaker:You got to play the game and it
tells you, "All right, Judge Lagel,
Speaker:you can now go to level two." I.
Speaker:Think that's a great analogy.
Speaker:I'm going to borrow that when I'm trying
to explain it to some people who are
Speaker:working on some of these things.
Speaker:It really is. Well,
Speaker:so it seems like what you're seeing
and taking part in leadership of on
Speaker:the advancement of use of
these tools in the judiciary,
Speaker:there's a lot of parallel between that
and what's going on in the private
Speaker:sector, or suppose it could
be public sector lawyers too.
Speaker:And I'm sure judges face the same
basic issues in terms of we've
Speaker:got hallucination problems still. You
point out don't use the free tools,
Speaker:use the paid ones for privacy reasons
that get you that extra level or A level.
Speaker:Preferably enterprise, that's even better.
Speaker:But I wanted to focus on this newer
Speaker:project that you've been a part of
called the Judicial AI Consortium.
Speaker:I think you told me that can
be shortened to Jake, J-A-I-C.
Speaker:Why don't you tell us about it and kind
of tell us your involvement in it and
Speaker:look forward to hearing more about it
and how we can help you spread the word
Speaker:about it.
Speaker:Yeah. So Judge Maritza Braswell, she's
a magistrate judge out of Colorado.
Speaker:She came up with the idea. I mean,
Speaker:she and I have spoken on
panels together over this AI.
Speaker:Who are the judges who are
using AI type thought process?
Speaker:So she called me and federal
judge, she's a district judge,
Speaker:Xavier Rodriguez out of Texas. So she
called the both of us and said, "Hey,
Speaker:look, what do you think of this idea,
Jake?" And the idea is very simple.
Speaker:Judges only ask stupid questions,
Speaker:talk to each other about how you're
using it, what you're seeing out there.
Speaker:Is it helpful? Is it useful? How
far should we go? Is that too far?
Speaker:Is it not far? What rules are being
in your state, in your courts?
Speaker:Everything from, do you have
an AI policy? If not, why not?
Speaker:And the AI policy can be as simple as
you can't use it. I hope that's not your
Speaker:policy, but your staff,
people are using it.
Speaker:So our policy is very simple.
Speaker:You may use AI in these situations
with these approved products
Speaker:and you must tell your judge
that you used it. That's it.
Speaker:So we don't want to be those two federal
judges that got hailed in front of
Speaker:Chuck Grassley about their
hallucinations. And they said,
Speaker:"My staff used GenAI
and we didn't know it,
Speaker:and there were some mistakes
in there." So again,
Speaker:it's our job to get it not to get the
first, it's our jobs to get it right.
Speaker:And so when lawyers mess up, no
big deal. I mean, it is a big deal,
Speaker:but it's no big deal. We could
sanction you. We can strike pleadings.
Speaker:You can be embarrassed in front of your
clients. When we mess up, it's the law.
Speaker:It could become precedent.
So it's a much different conversation.
Speaker:And so I encourage people to play around
with it before they start using it in
Speaker:their own workflows. And that's the
point of Jake. The point of Jake is,
Speaker:here are my experiences.
Speaker:There are other people like
me out in the judiciary,
Speaker:and it's a great learning
tool for all of us. Again,
Speaker:we're not recording anything. It's
just a conversation for judges.
Speaker:So we have had a first meeting.
Speaker:We had over a hundred judges
from across the country,
Speaker:and then we are having what
we're calling pop-ins, little 30,
Speaker:45 minute come if you can conversations.
Speaker:The first one occurred last
week. There was about 20,
Speaker:which is a perfect
number for these pop-ins.
Speaker:And then we'll have a couple of more
before our next big meeting in April.
Speaker:And so Judge Braswell
led one, I'll lead one,
Speaker:Judge Rodriguez will lead another one.
And again,
Speaker:it's just a great time for us to talk
amongst colleagues and figure this thing
Speaker:out.
Speaker:I mean, I guess it's
still early days for Jake,
Speaker:but do you envision it turning
into a nationwide network of judges
Speaker:or is it just going to- Yeah.
Speaker:That's the hope.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:I mean, I think it already is. I think
we've already got over 200 people,
Speaker:over 200 judges who have signed up.
Speaker:We've had international judges who have
won to sign up and we're keeping it to
Speaker:the US only for now. But yeah, I mean,
Speaker:I think 200 judges with a couple of
emails is a pretty good starting.
Speaker:Point. Absolutely. Did you use AI to
write your prompt to send out to them?
Speaker:Absolutely. Why would you not?
That is a perfect use case.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Your point about the gravity
of judicial AI use is well
Speaker:taken because if a lawyer, if
Jodi or I do it and we mess up,
Speaker:you cite a hallucinated case and we
get sanctioned, that's embarrassing,
Speaker:but that's more or less
the end of it for us.
Speaker:But we're talking about
embedding it into institutions,
Speaker:the extremely important third branch.
Speaker:And so I hadn't really quite
thought about it that way,
Speaker:but we're all kind of numb at this
point to seeing news reports about
Speaker:sanctions of lawyers who
continue amazingly to me
Speaker:to not vet their documents properly.
Speaker:Although as you point out, I mean,
Speaker:there are things that can happen and
I've seen it happen where the first year
Speaker:associate is using ChatGPT in the gray and
Speaker:not disclosing it to his partner or
her partner and that's a problem.
Speaker:But boy, yeah, when they start showing
up in judicial orders or opinions,
Speaker:which has happened, I mean,
the instances of that,
Speaker:I've only heard of a few. Are we
seeing that becoming actually more of a
Speaker:problem? I know you're trying to
educate so that that doesn't happen,
Speaker:but do you know about how many
instances we've seen of that happening?
Speaker:I only know of three, not
that it hasn't done more.
Speaker:You've got the two federal judge
opinions that had to be recalled,
Speaker:and then you have the state court
order, I think it was in Georgia,
Speaker:a lawyer prepared an order for
a judge that order contained
Speaker:hallucinated cases.
Speaker:The judge signed it without checking
it and it went up and actually
Speaker:their higher court just affirmed
the lower court's signature on that
Speaker:order saying, "Y'all didn't
bring this up." I'm sorry.
Speaker:Oh, wait, what?
Speaker:You know you have to object.
Speaker:I don't think it affected the final
outcome. It's probably the answer.
Speaker:I haven't looked at it too hard,
Speaker:but I thought it was interesting
that the Georgia Court of Appeal,
Speaker:I don't know if it was the Supreme
Court of the Court of Appeals,
Speaker:just came out with their ruling
on that hallucinated order.
Speaker:So just the mere fact that a hallucinated
case was cited doesn't affect
Speaker:the validity of the order is
the end result on that one.
Speaker:That makes sense to me,
Speaker:but there still has to be some
teeth in the fact that the
Speaker:lawyer presented a proposed form of order
to the court with a hallucinated case
Speaker:in it. And I suppose that's
handled obviously outside of,
Speaker:can be handled outside
of the judicial process,
Speaker:certainly outside of the
process of the merits.
Speaker:It's a good reminder of the courts when
you're presenting an order, run it,
Speaker:site check it first before signing.
Speaker:Yeah, for sure.
Speaker:Look, that's all that we did at the trial
court. After make a ruling, it said,
Speaker:now prepare a judgment and have it
to the court within 10 business days.
Speaker:Now we're going to have
to look a little closer.
Speaker:Yeah. I mean, that's very common
in our state court practice.
Speaker:Our state court judges are not
preparing their own orders.
Speaker:And so this is a real risk.
Speaker:And I hope that if nothing else
comes out of this conversation,
Speaker:trial court judges in our state and
elsewhere would really benefit, I think,
Speaker:from tracking what y'all
are doing with Jake,
Speaker:because I'm sure that the judges are
hearing about this from other sources,
Speaker:but just the idea that they can plug
into a resource like this and be informed
Speaker:or better informed about the risks and
about things that are happening around
Speaker:the country, to me, it just seems
like it brings a lot of value.
Speaker:I think your ranks may explode and you
may wind up with more people than you
Speaker:want. You're going to have to start
regional chapters or something.
Speaker:Yeah, something. But
look, aiforjudges.com.
Speaker:If any judge is listening and you
want to sign up aiforjudges.com,
Speaker:there's a few articles on there
and a link to join and then receive
Speaker:emails from us to attend meetings.
Speaker:Oh, I think that's awesome.
Speaker:I know you're talking about NJ,
Speaker:the chamber side and the judge facing
side and how you handle your policies and
Speaker:the tools.
Speaker:Are you also talking about the attorney
and kind of other side of that? I mean,
Speaker:do you have policies in your court or
statewide about how attorneys can handle
Speaker:AI or what they have to do?
Speaker:Yeah, the game plan. Again,
we've had two meetings so far.
Speaker:The game plan is to find those issues
as they pop up and discuss them.
Speaker:And AI related, of course,
Speaker:is plenty of other organizations you
can learn how to do other things,
Speaker:but anything AI related
that's hitting the courts,
Speaker:whether that's how do we use it to
assist with access to justice issues?
Speaker:How do I use it to speed the process
along? How do I use it to draft?
Speaker:How do I use it for administrative orders?
Speaker:How do I use it for all these and what
tools are we using and why are we using
Speaker:them and what are the settings
and how do you do this? I mean,
Speaker:anything related to AI in the justice
system from the judicial's perspective
Speaker:will be discussed.
Speaker:Has Louisiana created rules
on attorney use of AI?
Speaker:I know some courts in
Texas have local rules,
Speaker:but there hasn't been
anything at a system level.
Speaker:Yeah. So I was the chair of
the Supreme Court's AI task
Speaker:force, if you will. And
so I wrote a letter,
Speaker:open letter to every judge
across the country saying,
Speaker:"Please don't do these rules,
Speaker:these orders saying you cannot use GenAI."
I did this as soon as MATA came out,
Speaker:I was like, "For the love of God,
do not issue orders." It was,
Speaker:"You cannot use AI." And I
was like, "Well, then they
can't use their computers.
Speaker:You can't use GenAI." Well,
all right, you can use it,
Speaker:but you got to tell me about it.
Speaker:And I wrote an open letter to the entire
country saying, "For the love of God,
Speaker:please don't do that.
Speaker:" We have enough rules out there to
address these situations. And thankfully,
Speaker:the Louisiana Supreme Court agreed and
took the approach and sent a letter to
Speaker:the members of the bar reminding
them of all their duties,
Speaker:all the various rules
that apply and say, "Look,
Speaker:today we think the rules that exist
cover every issue that we're seeing."
Speaker:We could change that, which is great.
That's the way it should be.
Speaker:There might be coming time
where we actually need to
pass a rule because you're
Speaker:not stopping the hallucinations. For
the love of God, just stop, just stop.
Speaker:And if you're not going to stop, maybe
now is the time to come in and say,
Speaker:"Well, we're going to mandate one hour
of AI CLE for every lawyer." Again,
Speaker:I'm not a rule for rule sake guy,
Speaker:I thought the hallucinations
would stop by now,
Speaker:but now I'm on the bandwagon of we
should start mandating one hour CLE,
Speaker:not jazz hands CLE,
Speaker:an actual CLE that says
here are the risks and
Speaker:benefits of using AI. Here are some of
the tools, here are some of the settings.
Speaker:Again, we're not trying
to make everybody experts,
Speaker:but hopefully you'll pause after
hearing that mandatory one hour AI
Speaker:CLE and the fact that things
change every single hour,
Speaker:you're always going to have good material
for another one hour CLE the following
Speaker:year.
Speaker:Oh, no doubt about it. Well,
Speaker:I'm glad to hear you talk about
standing orders and local rules.
Speaker:I assume that's something that's been
discussed within Jake or will be shortly
Speaker:because I was so glad to hear what you
said about that because it drives me
Speaker:insane when we have too many rules
that are very issue specific.
Speaker:And I just saw on LinkedIn this week,
some judge, I can't remember who or where,
Speaker:it actually issued or
required a certificate in
pleadings saying you did not
Speaker:use gen AI or AI. And you point out,
Speaker:you can't really say that. Do you use
a spell checker? Do you use anything?
Speaker:Yeah, briefcatch. I mean, good grief.
If you're almost committing malpractice,
Speaker:if you don't use briefcatch or something
like that. And so boy, I really favor,
Speaker:and I've said this before,
Speaker:but our ethical obligations are what
they are and they tend to cover all the
Speaker:situations. I mean, they've
been in place for how long?
Speaker:Model ABA rules in the states that have
adopted their own variations of them.
Speaker:So I'm very happy to hear you talk
about discouraging the adoption of
Speaker:specific local rules or standing
orders, which is even worse, I think,
Speaker:addressing those issues because it doesn't
change anything about the ethics of
Speaker:our job that we have gen AI.
Speaker:Once you sign the dotted line,
I can hold you accountable.
Speaker:And I don't care if ... I always joke,
Speaker:how many of you all ever had a paralegal
or a first year associate and signed
Speaker:the dotted line after
they handed you a copy?
Speaker:Did you disclose to the court that your
paralegal prepared this or that the
Speaker:first year associate? No, no, you
did not. You signed the dotted line.
Speaker:That means you own it.
Speaker:Well, and that seems like the
cases that I keep reading about AI,
Speaker:it seems like it's a knowledge
issue rather than a rules issue.
Speaker:They didn't understand, oh,
Speaker:I thought when it spit out these cases
that those were good cases because it had
Speaker:checked them. And it's just
a misunderstanding that no,
Speaker:it's answering your question with words
that it's put together and they may or
Speaker:may not be accurate words.
Speaker:One thing that the folks committing
those errors need to know is you can
Speaker:actually use GenAI to
avoid those problems.
Speaker:There are specific apps that
will check you and make sure,
Speaker:or you can use the tools that
are already there to avoid that.
Speaker:And it's a great first use case for a
judge. Proofread this document for me.
Speaker:Don't change anything, just
proofread this thing for me.
Speaker:Just make sure that are
there any spelling errors?
Speaker:Are there any misstatements of the facts?
Speaker:Are there any misstatements of the
law? Site check it for me. I mean,
Speaker:these are simple things that you're not
going to get yourself in trouble by site
Speaker:checking something or by
proofreading something. It's great.
Speaker:It'll catch things that
the human eye cannot catch.
Speaker:Once you've read the same brief
or the same opinion 20 times,
Speaker:you can't see it anymore. You go blind.
Speaker:Oh yeah. We've all been
there for sure. Well,
Speaker:I think that's a great overview of
what Jake is doing. And like I said,
Speaker:it's still early days. And
so there's a lot yet to come,
Speaker:but you gave the URL for Jake and we'll
certainly encourage every judge we know
Speaker:to check it out at every level.
Speaker:It sounds like it's something
that's going to be worth tracking.
Speaker:I hope you do get to the point where
you have to create local chapters.
Speaker:That would be awesome
because it means that people,
Speaker:judges are interested and they want
to learn about it and they want to
Speaker:potentially use it to help.
Speaker:I know you talk about AI and we've
talked about it on this show too,
Speaker:about AI as an access to justice issue.
Speaker:And more efficient justice on the
judiciary side plays into that,
Speaker:dovetails into that.
Speaker:So I think it's very commendable
what's happening. And we're certainly,
Speaker:I'm not familiar with Judge Braswell,
Speaker:but Judge Rodriguez is just down
the road from me in San Antonio.
Speaker:I'm in Austin and certainly
very familiar with him.
Speaker:And he has written and spoken a lot
here locally in our state on these same
Speaker:topics.
Speaker:And so it's great to know that we've got
leaders in the judiciary standing out
Speaker:front and really encouraging other judges
to speak up and pay attention to this.
Speaker:Is it fair to say, I mean, well,
Speaker:maybe you don't know what the age
distribution is among Jake folks yet,
Speaker:but you've got the digital natives
who are comfortable with this.
Speaker:And now we're all old enough
where we see digital natives,
Speaker:not necessarily us growing up,
Speaker:but digital natives are entering this
phase of their career where they might be
Speaker:judges.
Speaker:You probably can't make any generalization
about the distribution of age among
Speaker:the folks that have expressed interest
in Jake so far. But I assume that the
Speaker:ones who are older are just generally
trying to educate themselves about AI and
Speaker:figure out what's going on.
Speaker:Yeah. I mean, it is to
some extent because look,
Speaker:I think I'm older than Judge Braswell
and Judge Rodriguez is older than I am.
Speaker:And I don't think it's necessarily
because you're a certain age,
Speaker:you can do this better than the
other. Again, Judge Rodriguez,
Speaker:if you're listening,
I'm not calling you old,
Speaker:but Judge Rodriguez knows how
to do this just as well as I do.
Speaker:And he's at the end of
his judicial career.
Speaker:I think he's been on the
bench almost 30 years now.
Speaker:So it's not like I'm the old person
in the room and I can't do this.
Speaker:And if you frame it properly,
Speaker:then you can tell people you already
know how to do this. And frankly,
Speaker:younger people using these tools scare
me more than older people using these
Speaker:tools because the younger
lawyers and judges may
Speaker:not have the scarring necessary to
understand the nuance of the law.
Speaker:And it's this ... I use this example
and we talked about war stories,
Speaker:so I'll give you one right now.
When I first became a prosecutor,
Speaker:I was asked to third chair, not first
chair, not second chair, third chair,
Speaker:a horrific homicide, multiple victims,
Speaker:DNA everywhere, mixed DNA samples,
Speaker:fire covering everything up. It was awful.
Speaker:I had no idea how to try that
case and I had no appreciation of
Speaker:how to present the evidence. But you
know what I knew? I knew PowerPoint.
Speaker:This was right after the phone
board and I was like, "Look,
Speaker:that phone board stuff is nonsense.
Speaker:Let's do PowerPoint." So I convinced
the senior prosecutor to allow me to.
Speaker:I used the diagram of the scene.
I had all the evidence laid out.
Speaker:I had all of the different mixtures of
DNA color coded on every single piece
Speaker:of evidence.
Speaker:And he would say something and I would
push a button and you'd get the next DNA
Speaker:sample.
It was horrible.
Speaker:It was the worst presentation of evidence
ever because the senior prosecutor
Speaker:knew the timing, but he didn't
know the tech. I knew the tech,
Speaker:but had no idea of the timing and it fell
very flat. It confused the prosecutor.
Speaker:It confused everybody.
Speaker:And that was not a good thing because
I didn't understand enough about trying
Speaker:the case. I didn't understand the
nuances of a multiple homicide.
Speaker:I didn't understand any of that. So it
didn't work well. But on the flip side,
Speaker:there was another homicide.
Speaker:This was before cell tower
records were really a thing,
Speaker:but I was the young buck, so they
threw the records to me and said,
Speaker:"Figure this out.
Speaker:" And I remember the Saturday where I
figured it out and I could pinpoint the
Speaker:defendant was here at the time of
the murder right on the murder scene,
Speaker:and I was able to track his flight to
another state using cell tower record. So
Speaker:that was an example of when the
youth, if you will, was helpful.
Speaker:And so I think it's this back and
forth that we need to think through.
Speaker:And the senior lawyers need
to be intentional about not
just turning over to the
Speaker:juniors,
Speaker:and the juniors need to be intentional
about learning the law before they just
Speaker:start using PowerPoint
or GenAI in this case,
Speaker:because you're just
going to hurt yourself.
Speaker:Yeah. I think about some people
I know and who are older than me,
Speaker:who have really made the effort to
learn this stuff. And it's really all,
Speaker:it seems to me just about mindset and
understanding the big picture of how it
Speaker:... You don't have to
know exactly how it works,
Speaker:but you just have to know how to use the
tool, what the limits of the tool are.
Speaker:We hear all the time the idea that, well,
Speaker:you've got to have the human in the loop.
And I think you talk about that some.
Speaker:And I think you even maybe drilled down
a little further on that and say the
Speaker:right human in the loop, not
just any human in the loop.
Speaker:What's your philosophy on that, Judge?
Speaker:I mean, you hit it. I hate the
terminology human in the loop.
Speaker:It's the right human in the loop.
How old were you, Todd and Jody,
Speaker:when you got your driver's license?
Speaker:I got a hardship license at 15.
Speaker:So let's use that as example. My son's
20 now, so when he was 16, he got a car.
Speaker:Assume that I can retire at some
point and the dream car is the
Speaker:Turbo S911, right?
Speaker:And so let's assume my 16 year old
came up to me when I had the nine
Speaker:eleven Turbo S and said, "Hey,
dad, I got a hot date tonight.
Speaker:Can I take the Porsche?" And I'm
like, "Sure, buddy, here you go.
Speaker:" And I tossed him the keys.
What's going to happen?
Speaker:He's going to put that
car into a tree or a wall.
Speaker:He's going to hurt himself and he's going
to hurt the little girl that he's took
Speaker:on a date. My point is,
Speaker:just because you have a law
license doesn't mean you
should get the nine eleven
Speaker:or the GenAI tool. You
don't know how to drive yet,
Speaker:even though you're a licensed lawyer,
even though you're a sitting judge,
Speaker:you don't have the skills necessary to
handle that much power. And that goes to
Speaker:my friction conversation.
Speaker:And so just because you're a labor lawyer
doesn't mean you're going to become
Speaker:the best med mal lawyer that ever lived
because you have a gen AI tool. No,
Speaker:you're still going to hurt yourself even
more so because you're going to be so
Speaker:confident that I'm a great lawyer that
you think you know that skillset as a med
Speaker:mal lawyer. And it's the same thing
with the court and everybody else.
Speaker:Just take it slowly, do
something you know really well,
Speaker:learn the strengths and weaknesses of
the tools so that you can go from the
Speaker:Buick to the Cadillac,
Speaker:maybe to the Honda and then to the Porsche
and the Lambos and everything else.
Speaker:So start small, start slow,
Speaker:do something today in a
very controlled way so that
Speaker:you can learn the
strengths and weaknesses.
Speaker:And once you learn how to use
ChatGPT and you go over to Claude,
Speaker:they're completely different and Gemini
is completely different. They act
Speaker:differently.
Speaker:Well, and this kind of dovetails I think
too with something you've talked about,
Speaker:about drift.
Speaker:The tendency historically in judicial
chambers is you've got the judge and
Speaker:staff, can be administrative
staff, lawyer staff, and the judge,
Speaker:depending on the court, is
going to vary a lot by judge.
Speaker:Their level of reliance on staff
for original thought and drafting
Speaker:varies a lot. But if you've got
a judge that relies on their,
Speaker:say their law clerks a lot,
that sounds like to me,
Speaker:a situation where that drift might come
into play. There might be some risk.
Speaker:And I think by drift,
Speaker:what you mean is the tendency
toward over delegation.
Speaker:And maybe in this is perhaps
the friction area for how AI and
Speaker:chambers is going to really work.
I guess what I'm coming to on this
Speaker:is it seems like, yes,
Speaker:judges can dip their toe in
this and try to understand it,
Speaker:but there's probably going to
have to be some level of training,
Speaker:whether it be just in chambers, chambers
by chambers, or say in your court,
Speaker:court wide, if there's a big
rollout of using AI tools,
Speaker:if you've got an AI
server in your courthouse,
Speaker:what is the plan or what
would be the ideal plan,
Speaker:I guess is the way I would ask it,
Speaker:for how you ensure continuity and AI
use and that there's not folks who are
Speaker:getting behind the Porsche, the wheel of
the Porsche and driving it into a tree.
Speaker:Take an iterative
approach, go slow. Again,
Speaker:build your dream world and then back
off and put friction back where fiction
Speaker:belongs. So dream big, build
it, don't implement it.
Speaker:And then once you've built the
dream world, go, "All right,
Speaker:we can't allow that drift to occur.
Speaker:Put that friction point back in right
there." We're not allowing this thing to
Speaker:draft an opinion.
Speaker:We're not allowing people to not
struggle with the white page problem.
Speaker:I'd never, ever want people to
hand this over and say, "Hey,
Speaker:give me a ... " I'm not a first
draft guy. I don't agree with it.
Speaker:I know some do agree with it. I don't
agree with it. I don't ever want ...
Speaker:We hear this word bias all the time.
I'm not talking about that kind of bias.
Speaker:I'm talking about confirmation bias so
that if something is already on a piece
Speaker:of paper,
Speaker:it's going to be the tail wagging the
dog and you're going to go in that
Speaker:direction and start down a line
where, no, you do the first draft,
Speaker:you struggle with the ideas, you struggle
with the concepts, fight through it,
Speaker:get something, and then look,
use it to clean things up,
Speaker:use it to say something better,
use it to finish a thought,
Speaker:but don't ever allow tail to wag the dog.
And so I am a
Speaker:big opponent to first
drafts. I don't like them.
Speaker:And I'm not talking about
administrative orders. I mean, look,
Speaker:if you do something wrote all day every
day and you're just replacing names,
Speaker:sure, use it to draft administrative
orders. And even on, again,
Speaker:like a writ that is a motion for summary
judgment denied on the showing made.
Speaker:Something very simple, one or two,
Speaker:that's not white page problem
that I'm talking about.
Speaker:I'm talking about handing over the
pleadings and saying, "What do you think?
Speaker:" Grock. No, let's not do that.
That's not the social contract.
Speaker:It's not anything that we signed up for.
Speaker:I would hate anybody to ever hear that
they lost their kids because Grock said
Speaker:so. If they were to use Claude or
ChatGPT, they would've had their kids.
Speaker:That's not the social contract. If
you want to do that, go mediate it,
Speaker:go arbitrate it, that's fine,
Speaker:but that's not the justice system
and it's not something that I'm.
Speaker:For. So let's talk, just
flesh out a little bit for us,
Speaker:the idea of the social contract.
What do you mean by that?
Speaker:I mean, you and I signed up for human
to judge an issue, period the end.
Speaker:If you want the bots to do it
because it's going to be faster,
Speaker:all these buzzwords,
consistency, transparency,
Speaker:all these buzzwords that we can have
an entire hour debate on those terms.
Speaker:Whose singularity are you building
for? I'll just leave it at that.
Speaker:That's not the social contract. I mean,
we signed up for, we have a dispute,
Speaker:we bring it to the courts, we
ask the courts to decide it.
Speaker:We then can say Judge
Schlagel is horrible or not.
Speaker:Part of the feel we talked about earlier,
Todd, part of the feel is to say,
Speaker:"I hate that guy.
Speaker:He is a terrible judge and I'm taking
him up and you can take me up." Can you
Speaker:imagine somebody losing
their kids and saying,
Speaker:"I hate ChatGPT?" There's no feeling
there. That is an algorithmic
Speaker:decision that was made and that could
change tomorrow because it was asked a
Speaker:different way or the algorithm changed.
That is not the social contract.
Speaker:And again, I'm not saying don't go use
these tools to mediate and arbitrate.
Speaker:That's a decision that was
made by parties consensually.
Speaker:There's no consensual decision
when you're in the justice system.
Speaker:I got sued or I have a problem
and I'm bringing you into court
Speaker:to handle this issue. And I think
that your voice matters, Todd,
Speaker:your voice matters, Jodi,
and my voice matters.
Speaker:Voice matters and it needs
to be handled by a human.
Speaker:Got it. That's like the
ultimate case of drift.
Speaker:If you're just handing
over everything to the bot,
Speaker:to the robot over lords,
I understand. I get it.
Speaker:And it takes me back to
something I read about a lot.
Speaker:And I think this is always a good way
of looking at what AI is and can be
Speaker:as thought partner. And you
describe it perfectly, Judge.
Speaker:Start with your blank first
draft as we hear it described,
Speaker:starts with an S. And get input on it.
Speaker:And is it logically consistent?
What errors are in it?
Speaker:Things like that are
great uses of the tool.
Speaker:The idea of your discussion of that
overall concept made me think about
Speaker:something I read about not too long
ago too, that I think it was the AAA,
Speaker:American Arbitration Association
now has this chatbot generated
Speaker:arbitration process,
Speaker:but the parties are consenting to it.
So there's not a social contract problem,
Speaker:right? And there are very
close parameters, type
parameters built around it,
Speaker:as I understand it.
Speaker:And that's not what we have in terms of
the general use of general AI or gen AI
Speaker:and to generate,
Speaker:go from zero blank page to opinion
with no input from the judge,
Speaker:just what do you think?
Speaker:I'm still curious how that AAA
thing's going to work out, but
Speaker:we shall see, but that's not the way
the judicial process ought to work out.
Speaker:So appreciate your comments on that. Well,
Speaker:we're getting close to the end
of our time together today,
Speaker:but I do want to ask you,
Speaker:in terms of the practitioners
that come before you as a judge,
Speaker:do you have some concrete
things that lawyers who are,
Speaker:let's say coming into your court,
Speaker:tips that you might give to them in terms
of the use of GenAI? It sounds like,
Speaker:as I said earlier,
Speaker:there's a lot of parallel between the
way that judges use it and the way that
Speaker:Eric shouldn't use it and
the way that lawyers should.
Speaker:Is there anything specific to the lawyer
use case that comes to mind that you
Speaker:want to bring to folks' attention?
Speaker:Lawyers should be using this
to write better arguments to
Speaker:the court. I don't know why
you wouldn't use it. Again,
Speaker:this always premises you
understand how to use it,
Speaker:but if Todd is a great appellate lawyer,
Speaker:Todd will write a better brief after
he's written his brief personally or in
Speaker:tandem with that will make it clearer
for the courts to understand what he is
Speaker:trying to say. Again,
you're not turning it over.
Speaker:The bot can make a suggestion.You're like,
Speaker:"That's terrible." I'm not telling the
judge that. If you use it critically,
Speaker:then you're going to write
a better brief to the court.
Speaker:And this is an appellate podcast. So
you might be a great orator, Todd,
Speaker:but I've pretty much read
everything. I'm pretty good.
Speaker:By the time you get there, there
are some issues that are very,
Speaker:very confusing that it's important for
oral argument and I want to hear about
Speaker:it and everything else.
But I mean, for the most part,
Speaker:you're writing your
opposition, your reply,
Speaker:that's already forming the ideas
before we even get in there.
Speaker:And so I would absolutely use it to
tear your opponent's brief apart.
Speaker:Use it to prepare for oral arguments.
Use it to prepare your own briefs.
Speaker:I would use, they have Google Notebook LM,
Speaker:which is a sleeper that
nobody talks about. I mean,
Speaker:you can feed briefs into it and literally
create podcasts for yourself to listen
Speaker:to arguments, to get ready for your own
oral arguments. Again, go for a job,
Speaker:use it to walk,
Speaker:delete it and do it again and see
what they are actually talking about.
Speaker:It's just a great way to get
you thinking through arguments.
Speaker:Ask these tools to be a panel
and what questions are you in?
Speaker:Feed at the pleadings.
"Hey, you're my panel.
Speaker:I'm about to go for oral arguments. Ask
me a bunch of questions and just go back
Speaker:and forth with it.
Speaker:Just get hit by the panel of AI bots
so that you can get ready for oral
Speaker:arguments." I mean, these are
great ways to use these tools.
Speaker:As an advocate, I would use it all day,
Speaker:every day because you
want to go a certain lane.
Speaker:You want it to confirm everything that
you're saying. That is a great use case.
Speaker:And my job's to get it right. Your job
is to convince me that you're right.
Speaker:So use these bots to sharpen your tools.
Speaker:I think that's great.
Speaker:It's our tradition I always wrap up with
a tip or a war story and you've given
Speaker:us some great tips,
Speaker:but I don't know if you've got more or
if you have a war story you want to share
Speaker:as we close.
Speaker:I won't give you another war story, but
leave it at this. It's going to be okay.
Speaker:We've been here before. We're
going to get through it again.
Speaker:I remember about 20,
Speaker:25 years ago when you were in that first
CLE and that lawyer walks up to you
Speaker:and says, "Hey, Todd, Jody, come
over. I want to show you something.
Speaker:I got my client files in
the cloud." And you're like,
Speaker:"The cloud. What are you talking
about the cloud?" You're like, "Yay.
Speaker:All my client files are up there
in the air. And if I want it,
Speaker:I just pull it up and be
like, you're going to jail.
Speaker:You're going to lose your law license.
Speaker:What are you talking about the cloud?"
But what did we learn from that?
Speaker:We learned a couple of things. Today, if
you're not using a cloud-based storage,
Speaker:you're probably the one
committing malpractice. Today
we learned that you don't
Speaker:use free because free is bad.
Speaker:We learned if you're
going to use cloud-based,
Speaker:you need to make sure that you have the
right license for the right types of
Speaker:files. We understood if
it's a medical record,
Speaker:it needs to be a HIPAA compliant
cloud-based storage and all of the same
Speaker:lessons are here today
for GenAI. Don't use free.
Speaker:Make sure the settings are right.
Don't let it to be trained off of you.
Speaker:All of these different things we
understand. So we've been here before.
Speaker:We'll get through it. It's all
good. That's what lawyers do.
Speaker:We adapt. We keep moving forward
and we figure things out.
Speaker:So you'll be good. If you
need a hug, ask Todd or Jody.
Speaker:I'm sure they'll give you one.
Speaker:We'll put up a booth at the
next appellate conference, Jody.
Speaker:Free AI stress hugs.
Speaker:Yeah. Good luck with that. Trying to
get appellate lawyers to hug each other.
Speaker:We'd make sure that there's
about a 30-foot barrier
around us if we tried that.
Speaker:I love it. That's great. Well,
Judge, this has been great.
Speaker:Sure appreciate your time. I personally
know of places I can find you online.
Speaker:Do you want to just recite
for our listeners the best
places folks can find you
Speaker:to track what you're doing?
Speaker:Judge Lagel.com. All there.
Speaker:I'll also commend, for those
of you who are on Substack,
Speaker:I'll also recommend your Substack,
Speaker:cover a lot of great topics there
and things that really make me think.
Speaker:So I appreciate everything you do there.
Speaker:And thanks for being
willing to come on with us.
Speaker:I know that when some strange appellate
lawyer from Texas reaches out and says,
Speaker:"Hey, Judge, would you like to come
on our podcast?" I'm sure you're like,
Speaker:"Well, who are these guys?"
But you've been great.
Speaker:We certainly appreciate your time.
Speaker:Thanks for having me.
Speaker:Thanks for listening to the
Texas Appellate Law Podcast.
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