I’ve been testing ChatGPT to see what all the buzz is about. I asked it to create a polished social media post for a personal injury lawyer in Illinois.
The result? Visually appealing. Sounded professional.
The headline read:
“Call the Best Lawyer in Illinois.”
Looks good? ✅ Yes.
Legal? ❌ Absolutely not.
Under Illinois Rule of Professional Conduct 7.1, the framework is set to guide and support professionals in their duties, ensuring that attorneys remain ethical and clients are protected and not improperly influenced.
Violations of the above can trigger Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission (ARDC) sanctions or state bar disciplinary action.
Anyone (a client, peer, or competitor) can file a grievance. Both entities are responsible for regulating the legal profession and take misleading lawyer advertising seriously, regardless of whether AI is used to generate the content in question.
Discipline ranges from warnings to more formal consequences like suspension or disbarment.
✅ You can say “award-winning” or “top-rated” if you can prove it.
So go ahead and brag about that Burton Award — if you’ve earned it.
However, don’t claim to be “the best” unless you’ve objective, verifiable proof, especially in Illinois and other states with similar regulations.
Don’t claim what you can’t prove. Know your state’s advertising rules.
Unlike AI tools that can create risky copy, KPC Marketing delivers legally accurate, bar-compliant messaging that builds trust, not liability.
We know the rules. And we follow them.
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