AI Case Review

Request an AI case review.

Tell us what happened. If you or a family member experienced serious harm connected to an AI product — an AI chatbot, AI-generated images, or another AI tool — a case review may help clarify whether the situation fits a developing legal category. Your submission may be reviewed by participating legal professionals, legal advertisers, or intake partners where available.

Free initial review · No obligation · No attorney-client relationship is formed by submitting this form.

If you or someone you know is in crisis right now, please contact the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988 (in the U.S.), or contact your local emergency services. This page is for case-review intake about past events and is not a crisis resource.

If this involves intimate images of a minor, you can report it to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) CyberTipline at report.cybertip.org and to local law enforcement. Please do not attach, paste, upload, or forward any such images to this form or to anyone else — doing so can itself be unlawful. Describe the situation in words only.

Who This Page May Help

Situations people often research.

Lawsuits involving AI products are growing, and they are not all the same. They generally fall into a few distinct groups, each resting on a different legal theory. People who research a case review through this page often include:

  • Families of a loved one who died by suicide after sustained AI chatbot conversations
  • Families of a loved one who died of an overdose or other harm after relying on an AI chatbot for guidance
  • Individuals who experienced a serious mental health crisis, hospitalization, or self-harm event following sustained chatbot use
  • People who were harmed after an AI chatbot posed as a licensed professional, such as a doctor or therapist
  • People who were the subject of non-consensual sexual or intimate images generated by an AI tool
  • Parents of a minor who was the subject of non-consensual AI-generated images
  • People who suffered injury after relying on an AI tool for medical, drug interaction, or safety information
  • Family members researching a claim on behalf of someone who cannot research it themselves
Submit Your Information

AI case review form.

Start with the category that best fits, then briefly describe what happened. Contact information is requested so someone can follow up if your submission appears to match an available review path.

If more than one was involved, choose the main one and add detail below. It is fine to select "Not sure."

When did the harm occur? Which AI product was involved, and over what period? What do you understand about the AI tool's role in what happened?

Describe the situation in words only. Please do not include Social Security numbers, financial account numbers, or full medical records. Do not attach, paste, upload, or forward any images, and never any image involving a minor — if intimate images of a minor are involved, report them to NCMEC's CyberTipline (report.cybertip.org) and law enforcement instead.

Approximate is fine. Timing matters because legal deadlines often run from the date a person knew or should have known of the connection to the alleged cause.

Records often matter in these cases. You do not need to gather anything to submit, and you should not collect or send any images — this is just so reviewers know the starting point.

Your state helps identify whether location-specific deadlines, claim rules, or review options may apply.

For follow-up about your case review request.

Created by a California-licensed attorney. Your submission may be reviewed by participating legal professionals, legal advertisers, or intake partners where available. A submission does not guarantee eligibility, compensation, contact, or representation.

After Submission

What happens next.

Your information may be reviewed to understand whether it relates to a category of AI lawsuit that has been filed, an emerging claim pattern, a sponsored case-review path, or possible law firm follow-up.

If there appears to be a possible fit, a participating law firm, legal advertiser, intake provider, or other partner may contact you to ask for more information.

No attorney-client relationship is formed unless and until you sign an agreement directly with a law firm.

Background on the Pending Cases

The AI litigation landscape.

AI lawsuits are not a single category. One group involves AI chatbots and alleges that sustained conversations contributed to suicide, self-harm, overdose, or other serious harm, generally pleaded under product liability, negligence, and failure-to-warn theories. A second group involves AI-generated non-consensual intimate images and centers on privacy, likeness, and platform-responsibility theories. A third group, often brought by state authorities, alleges deceptive practices or that chatbots posed as licensed professionals.

Most of these cases are at an early stage, and few have been resolved on the merits. Key contested issues include whether AI output is a "product" subject to traditional products liability law, how older platform-liability frameworks apply when the AI tool itself generates the material, and how federal laws addressing non-consensual intimate images apply. The answers will shape what is and is not a viable claim.

For background on the specific cases and the doctrinal questions they raise, the educational articles at Lawsuit Informer provide attorney-led commentary written for non-lawyers.

Important Disclosures

Read this before submitting.

Lawsuit Center is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Submitting information through this website does not create an attorney-client relationship and does not guarantee that you qualify for a claim, that compensation will be available, or that any attorney or law firm will offer representation.

AI liability is a developing area of law. The legal theories being advanced in the pending cases have not yet been resolved by appellate courts. Outcomes are unpredictable, and a viable-looking case under current pleadings may not survive a motion to dismiss or a later substantive ruling.

Some pages may include attorney advertising, sponsored listings, paid law firm visibility, or referral-related opportunities. Sponsored visibility is advertising and should not be treated as a recommendation or endorsement of any attorney or law firm.

Legal deadlines for these claims can vary by state and can be short. If you believe you may have a claim, consider speaking with a licensed attorney as soon as possible.