Florida Supreme Court Updates General Practice Rules to Address AI Usage

Kate Gould, Esq.
June 25, 2026

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      On February 10, 2026, Judge Jed S. Rakoff of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York decided that documents a defendant made with a consumer AI tool and later gave to his lawyer were not protected by attorney-client privilege or the work product doctrine. The defendant, Bradley Heppner, was indicted for fraud. While awaiting trial, he used an AI platform to prepare reports on his defense strategy and potential legal arguments, then included those 31 documents in his privilege log.

      A grand jury indicted Bradley Heppner, an executive of several corporate entities including a publicly traded company, with securities fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud, making false statements to auditors, and falsifying corporate records.

      Although many state bar associations have issued ethics opinions or offered informal guidance concerning the use of artificial intelligence, the Golden State is setting the pace for other jurisdictions as the first state to seek to codify AI-specific language into its Rules of Professional Conduct. In March 2026, the Standing Committee on Professional Responsibility and Conduct introduced the proposed changes which were developed at the request of the California Supreme Court.

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