15/02/2026
đ¨Your AI conversations just became court evidence. đ¨
Last week I had the privilege of sharing my general thoughts on legal considerations in the Age of AI at , and this week we got our first major federal ruling on exactly this issue.
In United States v. Heppner, Judge Rakoff in SDNY ruled that AI-generated documents shared with attorneys are not protected by attorney-client privilege. A CEO used Claude AI for legal research after receiving a subpoena, created 31 documents with his prompts and AI responses, then shared them with his defense team. When the FBI seized his devices, those AI documents became prosecution evidence.
Hereâs what event professionals, creatives, coaches, and startup founders need to know:
This wasnât a blanket ruling against all AI use as the court specifically addressed consumer AI with terms that permit government disclosure and disclaim confidentiality but it definitely sheds light on the courtâs thought process.
Your daily AI usage creates potential evidence. Contract drafts, client communication templates, business strategy docs, vendor negotiations - anything you put into consumer AI platforms could become discoverable in litigation or investigations.
You also should watch and vet meeting note takers as well because there is a blind spot. Your Zoom AI Companion, Otter.ai, or Teams Copilot might be capturing privileged conversations by default. That strategy session with counsel could already be transcribed and stored on third-party servers.
Your contracts need updating. If your confidentiality clauses say âno sharing with third partiesâ but you or your vendors use AI tools, there could be compliance questions worth discussing with counsel.
The legal landscape is evolving faster than doctrine can keep up, but cases like Heppner give us crucial guidance. This is less about avoiding AI and more about using it strategically within a framework that protects your business.
Technology evolves faster than legal clarity, but knowledge is power.
Weddingpro