Can the Defense Get Your ChatGPT Searches in a Georgia Injury Case?
Clients increasingly use ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Perplexity, and other AI tools the way they used to use Google: to understand symptoms, medical care, insurance claims, deposition questions, settlement value, and whether a lawyer is handling the case correctly. The problem is that a chatbot conversation is not the same thing as a private conversation with your attorney.
In Georgia injury litigation, defense lawyers can use discovery to ask for information relevant to the claims and defenses in the case. That includes traditional documents, medical records, photographs, text messages, social media content, and electronically stored information. AI prompts and responses are the next obvious target.
Georgia discovery is broad, but it is not unlimited
Georgia’s Civil Practice Act allows parties to use depositions, interrogatories, requests for production, requests for admission, and other discovery tools. Under O.C.G.A. § 9-11-26, parties may generally seek nonprivileged information that is relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action, unless the court limits discovery. O.C.G.A. § 9-11-34 also permits requests for documents, tangible things, and electronically stored information.
That does not mean the defense gets everything. A request for “all ChatGPT searches you have ever made” should draw serious objections. A request should be tied to the issues in the case, such as claimed injuries, medical treatment, ability to work, prior conditions, damages, credibility, or the incident itself. Overbroad, vague, harassing, or disproportionate requests can be challenged. Courts can issue protective orders when justice requires it.
Why defendants want AI searches and chatbot history
Defense lawyers are interested in AI searches for the same reason they ask for social media, text messages, photographs, and search history: they are looking for statements they can use to minimize damages or challenge credibility.
- Symptoms and causation: A client may ask AI whether neck pain, headaches, numbness, anxiety, or memory problems can come from a crash. The defense may argue the client was self-diagnosing or exaggerating.
- Case value: A client may ask, “How much is my Georgia car accident case worth?” The defense may try to portray the client as claim-focused rather than recovery-focused.
- Medical treatment: A client may ask whether to keep treating, whether to get an MRI, or whether gaps in treatment matter. Those prompts can be spun as litigation strategy rather than medical need.
- Depositions and testimony: A client may ask AI how to answer deposition questions. The defense may argue the client rehearsed testimony.
- Inconsistent facts: AI prompts often contain casual, incomplete, or mistaken facts. Even an innocent mistake can be used for impeachment.
Is ChatGPT history privileged?
Usually, no. Attorney-client privilege protects confidential communications between attorney and client made for the purpose of obtaining legal advice. Georgia law recognizes attorney-client communications as privileged, but a consumer AI chatbot is not your attorney, does not owe you the duties your lawyer owes you, and is not automatically part of your legal team.
Federal courts have started to confront this issue. Early 2026 decisions reached different results depending on the facts, including whether the AI use was directed by counsel and whether the material was already protected work product. The safest client-facing rule is simple: do not assume that anything you type into a public AI tool about your case is privileged, confidential, or immune from discovery.
The biggest mistake: deleting after a case starts
Clients should not respond to this risk by deleting evidence. Once an injury claim, lawsuit, or insurance dispute is reasonably anticipated, parties may have preservation duties. Deleting chats, searches, texts, social posts, photographs, or files after a preservation duty arises can create a separate problem and may lead to sanctions, adverse inferences, or credibility damage.
The better approach is to stop creating risky material, preserve what exists, and ask your lawyer what to do next.
Practical rules for clients in Georgia injury cases
- Do not put case facts into public AI tools. Avoid entering names, dates, accident facts, medical history, photographs, police reports, medical records, insurance letters, deposition topics, settlement numbers, or private communications with your lawyer.
- Do not ask AI to evaluate your case value. Case value depends on liability, venue, medical proof, causation, permanency, insurance coverage, liens, credibility, and trial risk. A chatbot answer can be wrong and discoverable.
- Do not ask AI how to “beat” a deposition. Preparation should happen with your attorney. Asking a chatbot how to answer questions can look terrible if the defense obtains it.
- Do not upload medical records or legal documents. Treat uploads as potentially discoverable unless your lawyer specifically instructs otherwise through an approved platform.
- Do not delete existing AI chats after a claim is underway. Ask counsel first. Preservation is often safer than unilateral deletion.
- Use AI, if at all, only for general education. General questions like “What is discovery in a civil lawsuit?” are less risky than prompts containing personal facts. Even then, do not rely on AI for legal advice.
- Turn off unnecessary data sharing and use privacy controls. Privacy settings do not create privilege, but they can reduce unnecessary exposure. Use available data controls, disable model-training where appropriate, and consider temporary chat features when available.
- Tell your lawyer if you have already used AI about the case. The conversation may be harmless, but your lawyer needs to know before discovery responses are served.
What lawyers should do when the defense asks for AI prompts
When defendants request AI searches or chatbot history, plaintiff’s counsel should treat the request like any other ESI demand: identify the specific request, evaluate relevance, preserve potentially responsive material, assert privilege and work-product objections where appropriate, object to overbreadth and disproportionality, and consider negotiating search terms, date ranges, subject-matter limits, confidentiality protections, or in camera review.
A targeted request for AI conversations about the collision, injuries, medical treatment, claimed limitations, lost wages, or deposition preparation may receive more serious attention than a blanket demand for every AI prompt a client has ever typed. The fight will often turn on scope, timing, relevance, privilege, burden, and whether the request is a fishing expedition.
Bottom line for clients
Assume the defense may ask about your AI use. Assume a chatbot is not your lawyer. Assume casual prompts can be misunderstood. But do not panic and do not delete. The safest move is to keep case questions inside the attorney-client relationship and let your lawyer guide discovery responses.
If you are pursuing a Georgia injury claim and have used ChatGPT or another AI tool to research your case, tell your attorney now. The earlier your lawyer knows, the easier it is to protect your claim, preserve what needs to be preserved, and push back against improper discovery requests.
This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Discovery obligations depend on the facts, the court, the specific requests, and the timing of the claim. Speak with a Georgia attorney before deleting, exporting, producing, or withholding any potentially relevant electronic information.


