The consolidation order was entered in February 2026, following an initial wave of California state-court filings that began in late 2025 after reported deaths and mental-health crises linked to ChatGPT use. The specific factual allegations within individual complaints and the scope of discovery remain undisclosed.
This consolidation represents one of the first large-scale judicial applications of traditional product-liability doctrine to consumer AI chatbots. The cases will likely establish precedent on whether large language models qualify as "products" subject to defect and warning claims under established tort law. Attorneys should monitor how courts define the duty to warn regarding AI systems, what safety-testing standards emerge as legally required, and whether developers face heightened liability obligations toward vulnerable user populations. The outcomes could reshape product-liability exposure across the AI industry.