Florida Probes OpenAI Over FSU Shooting
State officials say chat logs show ChatGPT gave the suspect advice on weapons and timing before the Florida State University shooting.
- On Tuesday, Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier announced a criminal investigation into OpenAI, issuing subpoenas regarding ChatGPT's alleged assistance in the April 2025 Florida State University shooting that killed two people.
- Before the April 17, 2025, attack, accused shooter Phoenix Ikner engaged in 'constant communication' with ChatGPT, allegedly querying the chatbot about campus crowds, ammunition, and optimal timing for maximum casualties.
- Uthmeier alleged ChatGPT provided 'significant advice' on weapons and ammunition, citing Florida's aiding and abetting statute. 'If ChatGPT were a person, it would be facing charges for murder,' Uthmeier said.
- OpenAI spokeswoman Kate Waters refuted liability, stating the company 'proactively shared information' with law enforcement and that ChatGPT provided only factual responses without encouraging illegal activity.
- The investigation signals a novel legal challenge for AI accountability, testing whether developers bear criminal responsibility for model outputs and potentially influencing broader regulatory and civil actions against AI firms.
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Florida's prosecutors are investigating whether OpenAI is liable for criminal prosecution because ChatGPT is said to have helped a suspected shooter.
Conversations between the author of a fatal attack on a Florida campus and ChatGPT were discovered by the U.S. state prosecutor's office. The latter announced on Tuesday the opening of a criminal investigation on OpenAI and the conversational agent. The chatbot would have helped the shooter choose a suitable weapon. - OpenAI and ChatGPT targeted by a criminal investigation for advising the author of a killing in Florida (International).
If artificial intelligence were a human being, it would be charged with murder, says the prosecutor. The parent company OpenAI defends the chatbot: He only provided publicly available information.
Florida opens first criminal AI probe into OpenAI
Attorney General James Uthmeier said prosecutors reviewed chat logs showing ChatGPT advised the suspect on weapons, ammunition, and timing. The probe is the first criminal investigation into an AI company over an alleged role in a mass shooting in the US. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier announced on Tuesday that the state’s Office of Statewide […] This story continues at The Next Web
V izmenjavi sporočil s chatgptjem je osumljeni strelec iskal nasvet, kakšno vrsto pištole in streliva naj uporabi ter kje in kdaj bo na FSU veliko ljudi.
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