AI Privilege Database

This database tracks legal decisions addressing whether AI-generated legal advice, analysis, or adjacent legal work product is privileged. Like the AI Hallucinations Database, it is a work in progress and will expand as new rulings appear.

It currently includes 5 decisions. If you know of a ruling that should be included, feel free to contact me.

Country
Party
Case Type
Case Court / Country Date ▼ Party using AI Case Type Type of Documents AI Tool Outcome Details
United States v. Zhuo N.D. New York
USA
2 April 2026 Lawyer Criminal Motion Implied Court suggested associated legal advice is not covered by privilege
Archie Morgan v. V2X, Inc. D. Colorado
USA
30 March 2026 Pro Se Litigant Civil Motion to amend Protective Order Partly privileged

The court held that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(3) can protect a pro se litigant’s use of AI as work product, but on these facts the plaintiff failed to show that identifying the specific AI tool would reveal mental impressions or strategy. The court therefore ordered the pro se plaintiff to disclose the name of any AI platform he used with information designated Confidential, while amending the Protective Order to bar uploading Confidential Information into mainstream AI platforms unless the provider is contractually prohibited from using inputs to train models, discloses inputs only as necessary, and permits deletion of inputs. The ruling protects AI-generated work product in principle but requires tool identification and imposes restrictions on AI use with Confidential material.

(Summary by GPT-5)

United States v. Bradley Heppner S.D. New York
USA
17 February 2026 Pro Se Litigant Criminal AI chat transcripts Claude Not privileged

Defendant Bradley Heppner used the publicly available generative AI platform Claude to create written reports and communications after becoming a target of a grand jury investigation. The court held the documents were neither attorney-client privileged nor protected work product because (1) communications with Claude are not communications with an attorney, (2) Anthropic's privacy policy and retention practices defeated any reasonable expectation of confidentiality, and (3) the materials were not prepared at the direction or behest of counsel and did not reflect counsel's mental impressions or strategy. Accordingly the AI-generated/exchanged documents are not protected.

(Summary by GPT-5)

Sohyon Warner v. Gilbarco, Inc., et al. E.D. Michigan
USA
10 February 2026 Pro Se Litigant Civil Motions ChatGPT Privileged

Defendants sought production of Plaintiff's use of third-party AI tools (e.g., ChatGPT) and argued any work-product protection was waived by such use. The magistrate judge denied the request, holding the information about AI use is not discoverable and is protected by the work-product doctrine (and attorney-client privilege where applicable), finding no waiver from use of AI tools. The court reasoned the requests were irrelevant or disproportional, would invade mental impressions/opinion work product, and that generative AI are tools not persons whose use alone effectuate waiver.

(Summary by GPT-5)

UK and R (Munir) v Secretary of State for the Home Department Upper Tribunal
UK
17 November 2025 Lawyer Other Implied Documents uploaded to free LLMs lose privilege

"We also observe that to put client letters and decision letters from the Home Office into an open source AI tool, such as ChatGPT, is to place this information on the internet in the public domain, and thus to breach client confidentiality and waive legal privilege, and thus any regulated legal professional or firm that does so would, in addition to needing to bring this to the attention of their regulator, be advised to consult with the Information Commissioner’s Office. Closed source AI tools which do not place information in the public domain, such as Microsoft Copilot, are available for tasks such as summarising without these risks."