
Does artificial intelligence deserve a seat in Canada’s courtrooms?
VANCOUVER — The case law looked real to Fraser MacLean.
It was December 2023 and the Vancouver-based family court lawyer was reading citations in an application by opposing counsel Chong Ke, who wanted an order allowing the children of her client to visit him in China.
“I read it there in the courtroom for the first time, and there were two cases talking about travel overseas and maintaining the cultural ties for the children,” MacLean said, initially thinking the case law would be difficult to oppose.
But the cases weren’t real.