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Home » Your Divorce Attorney Has a Warning About ChatGPT That You Need to Hear Before Court
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Your Divorce Attorney Has a Warning About ChatGPT That You Need to Hear Before Court

Melissa HoganBy Melissa HoganApril 21, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Imagine this: a person going through a difficult divorce is sitting at the kitchen table and entering their circumstances into ChatGPT late on a Tuesday night in a quiet home. They wish to comprehend their options, consider potential arguments from their spouse, and perhaps gain insight into the perspective of a judge. It has the feel of research. It seems intimate. In a hazy way, it feels like self-defense. According to a February 2026 federal court decision, what it really is could be a gift to the opposing side’s lawyer.

United States v. Heppner, which was decided by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, is the case that made all the difference. Bradley Heppner, the defendant, had hired a real attorney with a bar card, but he had also been using Claude, an AI platform, to evaluate the case’s facts and produce memos with a strategy focus. He spoke with his lawyer about some of the things he fed Claude. Later on, he maintained that those materials ought to be safeguarded. No, the court ruled. In a clear and unambiguous manner. The logic was simple: since AI platforms are third parties, disclosing information to them violates the confidentiality required by privilege, and no amount of further legal involvement can restore that.

CategoryDetails
Landmark CaseUnited States v. Heppner, No. 1:25-cr-00503-JSR (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 17, 2026)
CourtU.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York
What the Court RuledConversations with public AI platforms (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, etc.) are NOT protected by attorney-client privilege or work product doctrine
Key DefendantBradley Heppner — used Claude AI to analyze his case and create strategy memos without his attorney’s knowledge
Why Privilege Was LostAI platforms are considered third parties; sharing information with them constitutes a waiver of confidentiality under established legal principles
Does Paying for AI Help?No — even paid subscriptions (e.g., $25/month Claude or ChatGPT Plus) do not restore privilege if the platform’s terms allow data collection or sharing
Divorce-Specific RiskAI chats about finances, hidden assets, custody strategy, or attorney advice can become discoverable evidence in divorce proceedings
Advisory SourceWard and Smith, P.A. — April 1, 2026 client advisory urging all family law clients to stop using public AI tools for case-related matters
Safe AlternativeAttorney-directed use of closed, internal AI platforms — where counsel controls the workflow and confidentiality is maintained
Simple Rule“If you would not want it read in court, do not enter it into an AI tool.”

Family law attorneys have been observing this with a mixture of quiet alarm and grim satisfaction. satisfaction, as it validates what many of them have been casually telling clients for months. Concern, as the number of people utilizing AI to handle their divorces—without any legal advice at all—has increased more quickly than most professionals in the field had anticipated. Divorce is a sensitive subject. At three in the morning, people reach for whatever seems accessible, and when everything else seems chaotic, a chatbot that replies with composed, well-organized paragraphs is truly appealing. The issue is that the chatbot is a stranger in legal terms as well.

The Heppner ruling is especially broad because it extends beyond criminal cases. Its reasoning naturally extends to civil litigation, such as that which occurs in family courts nationwide on a daily basis, such as equitable distribution hearings, custody disputes, and alimony proceedings. Discovery is already extensive in these situations. Courts are used to going through bank statements, texts, and emails. Opposing counsel is beginning to inquire about AI chat logs, which are merely the next category. AI-related questions are now included in depositions. It is no longer hypothetical to request “all communications with AI-based tools, including prompts, inputs, and outputs.” It is taking place.

Your Divorce Attorney Has a Warning About ChatGPT That You Need to Hear Before Court
Your Divorce Attorney Has a Warning About ChatGPT That You Need to Hear Before Court

The way this is unfolding is particularly ironic. Due in part to the high cost of legal counsel and the perception that you must fully comprehend the divorce process before you can trust anyone, people turn to AI. That instinct isn’t entirely incorrect. However, the court made it clear that disclosing confidential information on a public platform, such as your financial records, legal strategy, or attorney’s advice, does not automatically result in the information being compromised. It actively removes the preexisting protection. No matter where information travels, privilege does not follow. Confidentiality is lost the instant it enters a system whose terms of service permit data collection or disclosure to outside parties. It doesn’t get better if you later share it with your attorney.

Given how many common people it directly impacts, it’s difficult to ignore the fact that this decision was made without much public notice. The majority of divorcing individuals are not considering the work product doctrine or the Southern District of New York. They are considering their next move, their mortgage, and their children. The legal community is still figuring out how broadly this decision will be applied and whether the boundaries will become clearer in subsequent cases. The practical rule that family law firms have begun posting on their websites, which is worth reading slowly, is sufficiently obvious at this point: don’t type anything into a chatbot if you wouldn’t want it read aloud in court. Completely stop.

Your Divorce Attorney Has a Warning About ChatGPT That You Need to Hear Before Court
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Melissa Hogan
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Melissa Hogan is the Senior Editor at Temporaer, and quite possibly the person on the internet who has thought the most about what happens to your data when a hard disk drive fails. She is a self-described storage hardware obsessive — the kind of person who reads NVMe specification documents for fun, tracks NAND flash fab yield rates with genuine emotional investment, and has strong, considered opinions about why QLC cells are misunderstood by mainstream tech media. She came to technology writing the way many of the best specialists do: not through a newsroom, but through an obsession that simply refused to stay quiet.Melissa, a stay-at-home mother, is an example of what the technology industry frequently undervalues: the serious, self-made expert who exists entirely outside of the institutional pipeline. She developed her technological expertise solely through self-directed learning, practical hardware experimentation, and an extraordinary appetite for technical documentation. She doesn't have a degree in journalism or experience in corporate technology, but what she brings to her editorial work at Temporaer is something more uncommon: a sincere, unfulfilled passion for how computers store, retrieve, and safeguard data, along with the patience to fully comprehend it and the ability to articulate it.

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