Mike Lindell’s lawyers say judge’s ‘scathing’ rebuke of their own AI blunder makes it ‘impossible’ for them to be ready for defamation trial

Mike Lindell

MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell checks his cellphone inside the Covelli Centre before a Save America Rally, featuring former President Donald Trump on Sept. 17, 2022, in Youngstown, Ohio (Jeff Swensen/Getty Images).

After using a generative artificial intelligence program to submit a court filing rife with errors — including citing to several nonexistent cases — attorneys representing MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell in a high-profile defamation case are seeking to push the trial date over “significant burdens” imposed on them by the court’s demand that they explain why they should not be punished for the “wholly deficient” motion they filed.

The A.I.-generated filing came in connection with a defamation lawsuit against the pillow magnate filed in Colorado by Eric Coomer, the former head of product security for Dominion Voting Systems, over the numerous false claims levied against him and the company by Lindell following the 2020 presidential election.

Lindell’s attorney, Christopher Kachouroff, on Monday filed a motion for a continuance, saying the request was “necessitated by extraordinary and unforeseen circumstances,” and cited the Order to Show Cause from U.S. District Judge Nina Y. Wang, which requires Kachouroff to explain why he and his co-counsel, Jennifer DeMaster, should not be subject to discipline for the egregious error.

Wang last week accused Lindell’s counsel of authoring the filing through “blind reliance on generative artificial intelligence” and threatened them with the highest level of sanctions, including referral to their respective state bars for disciplinary proceedings. Responding to the court’s misconduct allegations has “threatened the foundation of a fair trial” and “rendered timely and adequate trial preparation impossible,” according to Kachouroff.

“The Show Cause Order is scathing. It has triggered national media coverage, subjecting defense counsel to reputational harm, emotional distress, and significant distractions from trial preparation,” Kachouroff wrote in the nine-page filing. “Counsel has expended a majority of last week investigating the circumstances of the erroneous filing and responding to the Order, diverting critical time from compliance with the trial preparation, now just five weeks before the trial date. The public nature of the Order also raises concerns about potential jury prejudice, while the threat of sanctions has impaired counsel’s ability to zealously represent Defendants. These extraordinary circumstances, combined with new pretrial obligations imposed post-conference, necessitate a continuance to ensure a fair trial.”

Kachouroff’s legal quagmire began with Wang accusing him of coming to an April 21 hearing unprepared. During that hearing, Wang questioned Kachouroff about a number of errors in an opposition motion he had signed and filed.

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