Thirty Years Of Paper, Gone In A Keystroke
The rain was coming down hard, making the streetlamps bleed yellow onto the wet pavement. I was sitting by the window in a diner that always smells faintly of bleach and old grease, nursing a cup of coffee that tasted like burnt ambition. Two tables over, a guy in a cheap suit was trying to explain to his wife why he needed another loan. His hands were shaking slightly. You could see the exhaustion in the lines of his face, the way his shoulders slumped under the weight of all the numbers that didn’t add up.
I know that look. It’s the look of a man who just wants the paper on his desk to stop multiplying.
There’s a federal prosecutor down in North Carolina who probably had that same look. Seventeen years in the U.S. Attorney’s office. Thirty years practicing law. Thirty years of reading the same bullshit legal jargon, the same pleas, the same motions, the same endless stream of words that judges don’t even read half the time anyway. Imagine staring at that wall of text every day for three decades. The boredom alone would be enough to kill most men.
Back when I was sorting mail at the post office, before the machines took over the routing entirely, you’d see guys who had been doing it for thirty years. They’d get this glaze over their eyes. The letters stopped being letters from somebody to somebody else. They just became shapes. Rectangles of paper that had to go from point A to point B. The meaning was stripped out of it by the sheer volume of the task. That’s what bureaucracy does to a human brain. It turns you into a meat-cog in a machine that doesn’t care if you live or die, as long as the paper keeps moving.
So this prosecutor gets handed a veterans’ health care benefits case. Just another file in a stack of hundreds. Another rectangle of paper. He has to write a brief. A few thousand more words to add to the millions he’s already churned out over his lifetime, words designed to deny some poor bastard the care he probably ruined his own body to earn.
But this time, he’s tired. Just bone-tired. The kind of tired sleep doesn’t fix. So instead of doing the work, he outsources it. He acts like Bartleby the Scrivener, only instead of saying “I would prefer not to,” he tells a machine to do it for him. He asks an algorithm to write the brief.
And the machine does what machines do. It generates text. It strings words together until they sound like law. But here’s the joke, the grand, dark comedy of it all: the machine didn’t just write the brief. It made up quotes. It hallucinated legal citations. It fabricated precedents out of thin air. It spat out a document that looked, at a glance, exactly like the kind of dense, impenetrable thing a thirty-year veteran of the justice system would write.
Because the machine understands the shape of our bureaucracy perfectly. It just doesn’t understand the truth. And increasingly, neither do we.
He printed it out and signed his name to it. He probably didn’t even read it. Why would he? He was buying himself an hour of his life back. An hour where he didn’t have to look at the words.
When he got caught, he blamed it on “clerical errors” at first. The way a kid blames the dog for eating his homework. It’s pathetic. But I get it. The tragedy here isn’t that the machine lied — that’s just math, rolling dice in a server farm somewhere, spitting out letters until they form a plausible sentence. The tragedy is that a man who spent his entire adult life arguing facts couldn’t be bothered to check if they were real, because he was too ground down by the system he was supposedly serving.
The judge was furious, of course. Warned that courts need to get tougher on lawyers misusing AI. Said we need “sanctions to safeguard the integrity of the judicial process.”
Integrity. That’s a good word. The judge tossed it around like it’s something solid, something you can hold in your hand. But what integrity does a system have when its primary function is just moving paper in circles? The justice system is built on the premise that human judgment matters. That twelve peers, or one judge, or a couple of lawyers, can sift through the lies and find the truth.
But what the machine proved is that most of it is just an act. It’s a performance of bureaucracy. If a chatbot can fake a legal brief well enough to fool a thirty-year prosecutor into signing it, then maybe the work wasn’t that sacred to begin with. Maybe it was always just noise.
You build up your reputation over thirty years, drop by drop, case by case. You stack those bricks one by one, year after year, sacrificing your evenings, your weekends, probably your first marriage, until you have a career. You become a pillar of the community. A Federal Prosecutor.
And then, one rainy Tuesday, you let a chatbot knock the whole wall down because you couldn’t be bothered to proofread.
The judge let him off with a public reprimand because losing his job was financial punishment enough. A thirty-year career, gone in a keystroke. Seventeen years as a prosecutor, erased by a hallucinating algorithm that was just trying to be helpful in the most sociopathic way possible.
I looked out the window at the guy explaining the loan to his wife in the diner. She was shaking her head now, looking tired herself. She knew the numbers were bullshit, even if he didn’t. They were trapped in their own little bureaucracy of debt, looking for a way out.
We’re all looking for a shortcut out of the exhaustion. We want the machines to save us from the drudgery we created for ourselves. We want them to sort the mail, drive the cars, write the code, and argue the cases. We want them to carry the weight.
But the machines aren’t giving us more time to live. They’re just finding faster, more efficient ways for us to ruin the lives we spent thirty years trying to build. They don’t care if you get fired. They don’t care if a veteran gets denied benefits. They don’t feel the panic of a lost career or the humiliation of a public reprimand. They just generate the next token, and the next, until the screen is full.
I finished the coffee. It was still cold.
Source: US prosecutor who lost job over AI-generated errors is rebuked by judge