How to Prevent AI Citation Errors in Legal Filings: Lessons from the Latham & Watkins Incident

Introduction

The legal world witnessed a teachable moment in May 2025, when Latham & Watkins—a firm billing over $2,000 per hour for partner time and representing Anthropic—filed a court declaration containing fabricated citation details. The irony? The errors came from Claude, the very AI model they were defending in Concord Music Group v. Anthropic. The AI didn't invent a phantom source; it found a real one but mislabeled the title and authors—a subtle, systematic hallucination that evaded human review. This guide turns that incident into a practical protocol for any legal professional using AI. Follow these steps to protect your filings from similar lapses and uphold your Rule 11 obligations.

How to Prevent AI Citation Errors in Legal Filings: Lessons from the Latham & Watkins Incident

What You Need

Step-by-Step Guide

Step 1: Recognize the Hallucination Pattern That Slipped Through

Before you start, understand exactly what went wrong in the Latham case. An attorney found a real academic source via Google, asked Claude to format a legal citation with the correct URL, and Claude returned a citation with a matching year and link—but the wrong title and authors. Because the URL resolved correctly, the manual check missed the error. Key takeaway: AI can describe a real source inaccurately while keeping the surface details right. This pattern is harder to catch than a completely fake source. Train your team to look for this “metadata mismatch” specifically.

Step 2: Build a Citation Verification Protocol Before Drafting

Don't wait until after AI generates citations. Establish a multi-step review process from the start. For each citation the AI produces:

Create a simple checklist and require that each citation passes all checks before inclusion in the filing.

Step 3: Separate AI Generation from Manual Verification

In the Latham incident, the same person who asked Claude for the citation also performed the manual check—and missed the error. Do not let the same person both generate and verify. Assign a second reviewer who did not use the AI for that citation. This independent check leverages fresh eyes and reduces confirmation bias. If your firm is small, set a mandatory waiting period of at least one hour between generation and verification.

Step 4: Document Every AI Interaction for the Record

Courts are increasingly requiring disclosure of AI use. In the Latham case, the judge mandated explicit disclosure and human verification for future filings. Even without a court order, keep a log for each filing: the AI tool used, the prompt(s) given, the output, and the verification steps taken. This log serves two purposes: it proves good faith if a dispute arises, and it helps you trace errors back to the source. Store the log in the case file.

Step 5: Conduct a Final Rule 11 Compliance Review

Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires your signature to certify that all factual contentions have evidentiary support. A citation error—even if AI-generated—is your professional responsibility. Before signing:

Step 6: Educate Your Team on Systematic, Not Sloppy, Errors

The Latham incident wasn't a one-off mistake; it was a systemic flaw in how AI was reviewed. Hold a training session that explains:

Repeat this training every six months or whenever your firm adopts a new AI tool.

Tips for Maintaining Attorney Liability Protection

By following these steps, you can harness AI's efficiency without compromising the integrity of your legal work. The Latham & Watkins incident is a costly lesson—but one that can prevent far costlier ones for your practice.

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