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On Demand

AI: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly


Total Credits: 0.75 CLE, 0.75 Ethics

Average Rating:
   1
Categories:
AI |  Law Practice Management & Technology
Faculty:
Timothy M Collier |  William Morris Fischbach III |  Esq. William G Klain |  Jennifer M Perkins |  John W Rogers
Format:
Audio and Video
Original Program Date:
Jan 21, 2026
Access:
Access for 180 day(s) after purchase.


Description

This CLE will cover three distinct areas relative to AI (Artificial Intelligence) in the practice of law: the Practical Benefits (The Good), the Ethical Pitfalls (The Bad), and the Severe Consequences (The Ugly). 


Part I: The Good (Efficiency & The Practice of Law)
The "Second Chair" Associate: Using AI for first-drafting of routine documents (demand letters, discovery requests, nondisclosure agreements).

  • eDiscovery & Predictive Coding: How Technology Assisted Review (TAR) has moved from "novel" to "standard" for sorting massive document dumps.
  • Practice Management Automation: AI tools that handle intake, scheduling, and client communication 
  • Transactional Speed: Using AI to quickly analyze contracts for "market" terms vs. "outlier" clauses (e.g., flagging an indemnity clause that deviates from the standard).

Part II: The Bad (Ethical Gray Areas & Professional Responsibilities)

  • The "Black Box" Problem (Duty of Competence):
  • Confidentiality Breaches (The "Public" Input Error): What happens when a lawyer pastes sensitive client data into a public version of ChatGPT? 
  • The Death of the Billable Hour? If AI writes a brief in 30 minutes that used to take 10 hours, can you ethically bill for 10 hours? (The answer is generally no). But alternative fee structures (flat fees, value billing) may be beneficial or necessitated by AI efficiency. 

Part III: The Ugly (Sanctions, Deepfakes, & Malpractice)

  • Hallucinations & Fake Citations: Mata v. Avianca: the Marbury v. Madison of non-existent cases invented by ChatGPT.
  • Copyright & Data Theft: The massive lawsuits against AI companies (e.g., New York Times v. OpenAI) regarding the theft of intellectual property to train models.
  • Prompt Injection Attacks: Security vulnerabilities where bad actors "trick" a law firm's AI bot into revealing confidential internal instructions or client data.
  • Deepfakes in Evidence: “Cheapfake” vs. “deepfake” and the new frontier of evidentiary challenges that go with AI. 

Seminar Chair:
Will Fischbach, Wilenchik & Bartness PC

Faculty:
Hon. Jennifer Perkins, Maricopa County Superior Court
Tim Collier, Law Office of Timothy M. Collier
Bill Klain, Fennemore Craig
John Rogers,  Staff Attorney, Supreme Court of Arizona

Handouts

Faculty

Timothy M Collier Related Seminars and Products

Law Office of Timothy M. Collier PLLC


is originally from Cleveland, Ohio, and moved to Arizona in August of 2009 to study and practice law. He graduated from Ohio State University with a Bachelor in Behavioral Sciences and went on to get his Juris Doctorate from the Phoenix School of Law. Mr. Collier specializes in civil litigation and criminal defense, and has worked directly with Ms. Delgado since 2012. In his spare time, Mr. Collier volunteers as Chairman of the Board for Young Ones United, a child abuse prevention and awareness nonprofit organization located here in Arizona. Mr. Collier has two children, and loves riding dirt bikes and anything on water!


William Morris Fischbach III Related Seminars and Products

Shareholder

Tiffany & Bosco PA


is a Shareholder in the Phoenix, Arizona office of Tiffany & Bosco, P.A. Will is an experienced trial attorney that concentrates his practice in commercial and civil litigation with an emphasis in real estate, intra-company and business disputes, eminent domain, and select catastrophic personal injury/wrongful death/medical malpractice cases. Will is rated AV® Preeminent™ in the Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory, a member of Arizona's Finest Lawyers, and a member of the American Arbitration Association's (AAA) panel of arbitrators. Will's community activities include serving on the State Bar of Arizona's Civil Practice and Procedure Committee, the Camelback East Village Planning and Zoning Committee, and the Board of Directors and Executive Committee of the Goodwill of Central and Northern Arizona. Will's first courtroom experiences were in the United States Army Judge Advocate General's (JAG) Corps, where he served with the 101st Airborne Division and 82nd Airborne Division. Will was the lead prosecutor in two high-profile war crimes cases during the Iraq war-the Mahmudiyah Massacre and the Operation Iron Triangle killings-and won convictions in each case. He was honorably discharged in 2008 at the rank of Major. Will is a veteran of Iraq, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, and the Republic of Korea, and is a recipient of the Bronze Star Medal. Will received his B.S. from Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona and his J.D./M.B.A. from Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana. In his free time, Will enjoys training for and competing in Ironman races and short-course triathlons, as well as mountain biking and snowboarding. He lives in Phoenix with his wife Terri and their Chesapeake Bay retriever Chinook.


Esq. William G Klain Related Seminars and Products

Lang & Klain PC


a member of Lang & Klain, PC, focuses his practice on complex corporate and commercial litigation. He is a 2012-2022 Super Lawyers® selectee in business litigation and is listed in Best Lawyers in America® for commercial litigation and bet-the-company litigation. Bill has served on the State Bar of Arizona's Civil Practice and Procedure Committee since 2000, and chaired the Committee from 2011-2014. He is an appointed member of the Arizona Judicial Council's Committee on Superior Court. Previously, Bill served as Co-Chair of the Arizona Supreme Court's Task Force on the Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure and as a member of the Court's Advisory Committee on Rules of Evidence, Committee on Civil Justice Reform, Business Court Advisory Committee, and Committee on Civil Rules of Procedure for Limited Jurisdiction Courts. Through these committees and task forces, Bill has been involved with the restyling of the Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure, the Arizona Rules of Civil Appellate Procedure, and the Arizona Rules of Evidence, the initial drafting of the Justice Court Rules of Civil Procedure, the design of the Maricopa County Superior Court's Commercial Court pilot project, and a host of other civil rules projects, including the 2018 civil justice reform amendments and 2014 case management and trial setting rule amendments. He was awarded the Chief Justice's Outstanding Contribution to the Courts Award in 2016, the State Bar's Member of the Year Award in 2013, the State Bar President's Award in 2008, and the Scottsdale Bar Association's Award of Excellence in 2012. Bill teaches a course on Civil Pretrial Practice as an adjunct professor at the Arizona State University Sandra Day O'Connor College of law and has chaired or served on the faculty of more than 80 CLE programs for the State Bar and other professional associations. He has also authored a number of law-related articles for various publications. Bill is a member of the American Bar Association, the Maricopa County Bar Association, and the Scottsdale Bar Association. He received his J.D. from the University of Denver and B.A. from the University of Richmond. Bill lives in Phoenix with his wife, Carrie, and their two daughters.


Jennifer M Perkins Related Seminars and Products

Arizona Court of Appeals - Division One


Hon. Jennifer M. Perkins began service on the Arizona Court of Appeals, Division One, on October
30, 2017. At the time of her appointment by Governor Douglas Ducey, Judge Perkins was Assistant
Solicitor General for the State of Arizona.
Judge Perkins was born in Portales, New Mexico, and primarily raised in Albuquerque. She attended the
prestigious Albuquerque Academy from 1988-1995, before moving to Washington D.C. to attend the
Elliott School of International Affairs at the George Washington University as a National Merit Scholar.
Therafter, she relocated again to Dallas, Texas, and earned her juris doctor from the SMU Dedman
School of Law, graduating cum laude in 2002.
Judge Perkins started her career at the law firm of Browning & Peifer (now Peifer, Hanson, & Mullins)
in Albuquerque, New Mexico. While there, she litigated complex commercial matters including class
action plaintiff and defense work, and assisted with employment and contract litigation. In 2003, the
judge accompanied the Honorable James O. Browning in transitioning to the federal district court bench,
serving as his first law clerk.
After her clerkship, Judge Perkins moved to Arizona to work for the Institute for Justice, Arizona
Chapter, a public interest law firm. She spent five years with IJ-AZ litigating civil rights cases in
Arizona and across the country. In 2009, the judge became Disciplinary Counsel for the Arizona
Commission on Judicial Conduct, where she reviewed and prosecuted ethics complaints against state
court judges throughout Arizona. After five years serving the state in this capacity, Judge Perkins
entered private practice by joining Mandel Young, an appellate law firm in Phoenix. While there, she
worked on state and federal appeals involving a wide range of legal subjects, including complex
business disputes, property rights, judicial ethics, and personal injury matters.
In January 2015, Judge Perkins joined the Office of the Arizona Attorney General to serve as the first
Assistant Solicitor General; in that capacity, she was responsible for oversight of Attorney General
Opinions and served as ethics counsel to the entire office. In addition to these two primary roles, the
judge assisted on a variety of matters including trial and appellate litigation of election-related matters;
federal appellate litigation with the Federalism Unit; state criminal appeals; and drafting amicus briefs
on behalf of Arizona in state and federal courts.


John W Rogers Related Seminars and Products

Staff Attorney

Supreme Court of Arizona


JOHN W. ROGERS — Staff Attorney with the Staff Attorneys’ Office of the Arizona Supreme Court. From 1982 to 2013, he practiced at Brown & Bain P.A. and (after a 2004 merger) Perkins Coie LLP, where he specialized in complex litigation, product liability, antitrust, and general commercial litigation. Mr. Rogers received a B.A. with Honors and Distinction from Stanford University in 1976, a Masters in Public Policy from Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government in 1980, and a J.D., cum laude, from Harvard Law School in 1980. Before entering private practice, he served two years as a law clerk to the Honorable Thomas Tang of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Mr. Rogers has been a member of the State Bar Civil Practice and Procedure Committee since 1997, and served as chair of that committee from September 2007 through June 2011. He also served as a member of the State Bar Committee on the Rules of Professional Conduct from 2000 to 2016. Also, from 2006 to August 2014, he served as chair of the Civil Practice Subcommittee of the Local Rules Committee for District of Arizona.


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