AI has potential to become an important tool to improve the time-consuming and expensive process of responding to federal government subpoenas or civil investigative demands, or CIDs. Before moving headlong into this possible avenue, companies should consider benefits and risks of using AI.

Benefits

Responding to a subpoena or CID can be resource-intensive. Relevant custodians must be identified and their materials collected. Such materials should be reviewed for responsiveness and produced for the government.

At the same time, companies are identifying potential areas of exposure and deciding whether or how to address this with the government.

AI shows great promise in helping streamline these tasks. AI search tools have potential to help identify responsive documents without needing to interview employees or conduct lengthy reviews.

Chatbots could be used to help highlight areas of exposure based on subpoena or CID requests. They can also help craft substantive responses. In short, AI can help individuals complete certain tasks more efficiently, which allows legal teams and other personnel to handle pressing matters more capably.

Downsides

What are the downsides of using AI to respond to government subpoenas or CIDs? One concern is that replacing human actors with AI could upend attorney-client privilege and work product protections.

For instance, are the inputted prompts in the AI tool considered attorney-work product? Most would argue yes, assuming an attorney, or someone working at the direction of an attorney, crafts the prompts. But what about AI outputs? The government may seek to obtain the outputs on the grounds that they're facts—facts, as opposed to legal opinions, are generally not privileged.

The government could also argue that AI outputs aren't protected because attorney work product protections only cover the work product of humans. The Copyright Office has been struggling with a similar issue: determining how much human input is required to trigger copyright protections for works created largely or solely by AI.

Depending on how the Copyright Office decides this issue, it may create a precedent that AI-produced works either do or don't warrant the same protections afforded to humans. Accordingly, AI outputs may not have protections usually enjoyed by attorneys.

Beyond privilege concerns, the government's involvement in a company's response to a subpoena or CID may increase with the availability of AI tools. If the government learns that a company has AI capabilities, it may seek to co-opt these tools to run its own queries and prompts.

It's common for the government to review search terms used to identify responsive documents and to even propose their own search terms for a company to run across a document database.

Requesting companies to run certain AI prompts may seem to the government as merely an extension of this common practice. Most companies likely wouldn't be comfortable allowing the government access to such tools.

Managing Risks

How should a company minimize these potential risks? While some companies may consider simply not adopting any AI tools, that's likely not a viable option for the long term, or even for the short term.

One potential option is to cabin the use of AI to certain departments or otherwise curtail functionality so the legal department isn't directly using AI. Establishing firewalls around the legal department could avoid some of the above issues while still providing AI benefits to other departments in the company.

Another option is to leverage outside counsel to take the lead on responding to government requests. A company could grant outside counsel temporary access to any internal AI tools so the benefits of AI could be realized in responding to the subpoena or CID.

At the same time, outside counsel would likely be better positioned to push back against the government regarding any aggressive demands related to AI use.

One thing is clear: AI holds incredible promise, but companies must ensure that the use of AI is appropriately supervised, and their outputs closely reviewed and monitored—by humans, including attorneys—to minimize associated risks.

This article does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg Industry Group, Inc., the publisher of Bloomberg Law and Bloomberg Tax, or its owners.

Originally published by Bloomberg Industry Group, Inc..

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