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Texas Supreme Court Proposes AI Misuse Rules with Sanctions and Filing Attestations

Published
Score
17

Why it matters

The Texas Supreme Court has proposed new procedural rules requiring lawyers to certify they have verified all AI-generated content before filing and imposing specific sanctions for violations. The rules mandate explicit attestations of accuracy, directly addressing the rapid adoption of generative AI tools by Texas attorneys. This proposal follows the Texas Responsible Artificial Intelligence Governance Act (TRAIGA), signed by Governor Greg Abbott on June 22, 2025, and effective January 1, 2026, which establishes civil penalties of $10,000 to $200,000 for AI misuse in legal contexts.

The State Bar of Texas recently reported that AI adoption among state lawyers has more than doubled since 2024. The specific scope and enforcement mechanisms of the Supreme Court's proposed rules remain under development, with details of the filing not yet public.

Attorneys practicing in Texas should monitor these rules closely. The Supreme Court's intervention targets courtroom end-users rather than AI developers, creating direct accountability for lawyers who submit AI-assisted filings. As AI tools become standard in legal practice, courts will increasingly scrutinize the accuracy of AI-generated arguments. The certification requirement shifts liability to the filing attorney, making verification protocols essential to avoid sanctions. Other state judiciaries are likely watching this approach as a potential model for their own AI governance frameworks.

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