Peter L. Clinco v. Commissioner
Peter L. Clinco v. Commissioner is one matter in the Veritas record of US court proceedings involving AI-generated citations that could not be verified against the reporters named. The summary below is drawn from the underlying court document, linked at the foot of this page.
- Court
- US Tax Court
- Date
- February 9, 2026
- Party
- Lawyer
- AI tool
- Not identified in the order
- Outcome
- Admonishment; no sanction imposed
- Penalty
- No monetary penalty in this order.
What the record shows
The court found that three of the four cases cited by attorney Wagner, including "Cacchillo v. Commissioner, 130 T.C. 132 (2008)," appeared to be hallucinations generated by a large language model AI, with no such decisions located at the cited citations. The court rejected the argument and admonished counsel, echoing that briefs citing nonexistent cases are "[a]lways a bad idea," without imposing a sanction in this opinion.
This entry reflects the court document as filed. The citations at issue could not be located in the reporters named at the time of the order. The reading here is descriptive of the public record and is not legal advice.
Source documents
The test this filing did not run
Every matter in this record shares one mechanism: a citation that did not resolve to an opinion in the reporter named, in a brief that was filed before any verification step ran. Veritas runs that step. The Filing Risk Scanner extracts each citation, resolves it against reporter and public-record sources, and returns a verdict on each one — located, partial, or not located in reporter — before the brief is signed.
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