U.S. Judge Shields AI-Generated Legal Content Under Work-Product Doctrine, Limiting Discovery Access
June 16, 2026
Legal experts say the ruling could become a reference point for future disputes about AI-generated content, balancing privacy concerns with discovery obligations on a case-by-case basis.
Judge Jeffrey Fischer rejected a subpoena seeking prompts, uploaded materials, and chatbot-generated responses used in preparing court filings, ruling they are akin to attorney work product.
A U.S. judge ruled that private ChatGPT conversations are protected under the work-product doctrine, shielding AI-assisted legal preparation from discovery in a case involving Alpha Tech Lending and former president John Recchio III.
While not creating a blanket privilege for all AI interactions, the decision signals courts may limit broad access to AI chat histories linked to litigation strategy.
Recchio, self-represented, called the subpoena a broad intrusion and a fishing expedition, arguing the decision protects private legal preparations.
The case centers on breach of contract and related claims, with Alpha Tech Lending seeking AI-derived materials to test Recchio’s positions, while Recchio contends the request intrudes on private legal preparations.
OpenAI was not a party, but the subpoena underscored the growing role of AI platforms in litigation and the privacy/disclosure questions surrounding AI-generated information.
Alpha Tech Lending plans to appeal, signaling that higher courts may further clarify how AI-generated materials should be treated in discovery and privilege analyses.
The decision suggests traditional legal protections may extend to AI-generated materials, potentially shaping how AI tools are used in legal research, drafting, and strategy.
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