In an issue of first impression, a federal US trial court in New York recently held that a criminal defendant’s communications with a public generative artificial intelligence platform were neither protected by attorney-client privilege nor the attorney work product doctrine (the latter is akin to litigation privilege in Canada)1. While the applicability of the court’s holding in United States v. Heppner is constrained to its facts and is not binding authority, the opinion serves as a cautionary tale for companies, in-house counsel, and lawyers alike, and reinforces the risks inherent in using AI platforms in connection with legal matters.
Bradley Heppner was indicted for securities fraud and other charges relating to alleged misconduct in his role as CEO and chairman of several companies. In connection with Heppner’s arrest, federal authorities executed a warrant and seized documents and electronic devices from his home.
Among the documents seized were Heppner’s communications (the AI Documents) with Anthropic’s generative AI tool after he received a grand jury subpoena notifying him that he was the target of an investigation. Heppner communicated with the AI tool to prepare reports outlining his defense strategy and to formulate proposed responses to the government’s case.
Heppner asserted privilege over the AI Documents, claiming that he had inputted information he learned from counsel, created the AI Documents for the purpose of speaking with counsel to obtain legal advice, and subsequently shared the contents of the AI Documents with counsel. Crucially, however, Heppner’s lawyers had not directed him to run the AI searches and Heppner did not use an enterprise or other non-public version of the AI tool.
The government moved the court to rule that the AI Documents, which were withheld but reflected on Heppner’s privilege logs, were neither privileged nor attorney work product. The court orally granted the motion at a pretrial conference and issued a written opinion shortly after.
Despite the modern context, the court applied the traditional requirements of the attorney-client privilege and attorney work product doctrine to determine that neither shielded the AI Documents from disclosure.
The court explained that the documents lacked two, if not all three, elements of the attorney-client privilege:
Although the work product doctrine protects certain materials prepared in anticipation of litigation by non-lawyers, the court explained the AI Documents did not qualify because they were not prepared by or at the request of Heppner’s counsel and did not reflect his lawyers’ strategy at the time they were created. The court reiterated that the work product doctrine exists to protect from disclosure attorneys’ mental processes. But because the AI Documents were not prepared at counsel’s request and did not disclose counsel’s strategy, they were not protected.
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