Sunday, February 1, 2026

US Supreme Court: state requirement of certificate of merit in malpractice case does not apply in federal court

In one of the first reported decisions of the term, the US Supreme Court has decided that a state law requirement (to file a certificate of merit) in a medical malpractice case should not apply if the claim is filed in Federal Court.

The case is called Berk v. Choy.

You can read a summary and comment on it in SCOTUS blog.

Monday, January 19, 2026

Yet another lawsuit filed against ChatGPT for its alleged role in a user's suicide

 Since August of last year I have seen several cases filed in different jurisdictions against AI platforms alleging in one or another that the platform contributed to a person's decision to commit suicide.  See here, and here.  I also reported on the fact that Nevada decided to abandoned the so-called "suicide rule" which will make it less difficult to support a prima face case for injuries caused by suicide.  See here.

So, today I am reporting on yet another case filed against ChatGPT.  In this one, the mother of a man who killed himself after conversing with the chatbot is suing the generative artificial intelligence company OpenAI and its CEO and founder, Sam Altman. According to the article, the mother alleges that the AI platform coached her son into suicide, even while he told ChatGPT that he did not want to die.

You can read more about this case here.