Citation Checker
Instructions
Verify the existence, accuracy, and current authority of every legal citation in a document. Citation checking is a critical quality control function in legal practice — an incorrect citation undermines credibility with the court, and a citation to overruled authority can be malpractice. In the Patriot University platform context, citation accuracy is essential to maintaining the trust and utility of the knowledge base.
The Citation Checking Process
Step-by-Step Protocol
| Step |
Action |
Purpose |
| 1 |
Verify existence |
Confirm the cited authority actually exists — the case was decided, the statute was enacted, the regulation was promulgated |
| 2 |
Verify citation format |
Check that the citation conforms to Bluebook format (or applicable court rules) |
| 3 |
Verify pinpoint citations |
Confirm that the specific page, section, or paragraph cited actually contains the proposition attributed to it |
| 4 |
Verify quotation accuracy |
Compare every quotation word-for-word against the original source. Check for omissions (ellipses), alterations (brackets), and emphasis |
| 5 |
Check current authority |
Run every case through a citator (KeyCite, Shepard’s, BCITE) to confirm it has not been overruled, reversed, or significantly questioned |
| 6 |
Check statutory currency |
Verify that cited statutes have not been amended, repealed, or renumbered |
| 7 |
Check regulatory currency |
Verify that cited regulations have not been amended or revoked |
| 8 |
Flag problems |
Mark any citation that cannot be verified, has negative treatment, or does not support the proposition for which it is cited |
Citator Signal Interpretation
KeyCite (Westlaw)
| Flag |
Meaning |
Action Required |
| Red flag |
Case is no longer good law for at least one point of law |
STOP — investigate immediately. May not be cited as authority for the overruled point |
| Yellow flag |
Case has some negative treatment but has not been overruled |
Investigate — determine if the negative treatment affects the proposition for which the case is cited |
| Blue-striped H |
Case has some history (appeal, remand, etc.) |
Review the history to ensure the cited proposition was not affected |
| Green C |
Case has citing references but no direct negative treatment |
Generally safe, but review citing references for relevant discussion |
Shepard’s (Lexis+)
| Signal |
Meaning |
Action Required |
| Red stop sign |
Negative treatment — overruled, reversed, or superseded |
STOP — investigate immediately |
| Orange Q |
Questioned by citing authority |
Investigate — determine if the questioning affects the cited proposition |
| Yellow triangle |
Caution — possible negative treatment |
Investigate the nature of the treatment |
| Green diamond |
Positive treatment — followed, affirmed |
Generally safe |
| Blue circle |
Citing references available, treatment neutral |
Review if needed |
Common Citation Errors
| Error Type |
Example |
How to Catch |
| Ghost citations |
Case does not exist (fabricated by AI or human error) |
Search the case name and citation in Westlaw/Lexis. If it does not appear, it does not exist |
| Wrong reporter |
Case exists but the volume/page citation is wrong |
Verify by case name search, then confirm the specific reporter citation |
| Wrong year |
Year in parenthetical is incorrect |
Verify against the actual opinion |
| Wrong court |
Court identification in parenthetical is wrong |
Verify against the actual opinion |
| Stale authority |
Case has been overruled or superseded |
Run through citator |
| Wrong pinpoint |
The cited page does not contain the proposition attributed |
Read the actual page cited |
| Misquotation |
Quoted text does not match the original |
Word-for-word comparison against the original |
| Missing alterations |
Brackets or ellipses not shown when text was altered |
Compare against original |
| Over-citation |
Citation does not actually support the proposition stated |
Read the cited passage in context |
| Under-citation |
Proposition stated without any supporting citation |
Flag for the author to add authority |
Bluebook Citation Format — Quick Reference
Cases
Standard format: Party v. Party, Volume Reporter Page (Court Year).
| Element |
Example |
| Full citation |
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483 (1954) |
| With pinpoint |
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483, 495 (1954) |
| Short form (id.) |
Id. at 495 |
| Short form (supra) |
Brown, 347 U.S. at 495 |
| Parenthetical |
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483, 495 (1954) (holding that racial segregation in public schools violates the Equal Protection Clause) |
Reporter Abbreviations (Federal)
| Reporter |
Abbreviation |
Court |
| United States Reports |
U.S. |
Supreme Court |
| Supreme Court Reporter |
S. Ct. |
Supreme Court |
| Federal Reporter (3d series) |
F.3d / F.4th |
Courts of Appeals |
| Federal Supplement (3d series) |
F. Supp. 3d |
District Courts |
| Federal Rules Decisions |
F.R.D. |
Discovery/procedural opinions |
Statutes
| Type |
Format |
Example |
| U.S. Code |
Title U.S.C. § Section |
42 U.S.C. § 1983 |
| Public Law |
Pub. L. No. XX-XXX, § Section, Volume Stat. Page (Year) |
Pub. L. No. 117-58, § 11101, 135 Stat. 429 (2021) |
| State statute |
State Code Ann. § Section (Year) |
Cal. Penal Code § 187 (West 2023) |
Regulations
| Type |
Format |
Example |
| Code of Federal Regulations |
Title C.F.R. § Section (Year) |
8 C.F.R. § 1003.1 (2025) |
| Federal Register |
Volume Fed. Reg. Page (Date) |
90 Fed. Reg. 12,345 (Mar. 1, 2025) |
Constitutional Provisions
| Type |
Format |
Example |
| Amendment |
U.S. Const. amend. XX |
U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1 |
| Article |
U.S. Const. art. X, § X, cl. X |
U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 1 |
Signals
| Signal |
Meaning |
| [no signal] |
Cited authority directly states the proposition |
| See |
Cited authority clearly supports the proposition but does not directly state it |
| See also |
Additional authority supporting the proposition |
| Cf. |
Cited authority supports the proposition by analogy |
| But see |
Cited authority directly contradicts the proposition |
| But cf. |
Cited authority contradicts the proposition by analogy |
| See generally |
Cited authority provides helpful background |
| Contra |
Cited authority directly states the contrary of the proposition |
AI-Generated Citation Risks
The Hallucination Problem
Large language models (LLMs) are known to fabricate legal citations — generating case names, reporters, and page numbers that look plausible but refer to nonexistent opinions. This is not a theoretical risk; it has resulted in sanctions against attorneys who filed AI-generated briefs with fabricated citations.
Notable incidents:
- Mata v. Avianca, Inc., No. 22-cv-1461 (S.D.N.Y. 2023) — Attorney sanctioned for filing brief containing six fabricated case citations generated by ChatGPT
- Multiple subsequent incidents across federal and state courts
Verification Protocol for AI-Assisted Content
Every citation in any AI-generated or AI-assisted content must be verified through the full citation checking protocol:
- Never trust an AI-generated citation without independent verification. Search the exact case name and citation in a legal database
- Verify the holding matches. Even if the case exists, the AI may misstate what it held
- Verify quotations. AI frequently generates plausible-sounding but inaccurate quotations
- Run through a citator. Confirm the case remains good law
- Check pinpoint citations. AI frequently generates incorrect page numbers
Red Flags for Fabricated Citations
| Red Flag |
What to Check |
| Case name is unusually generic |
Search for the exact case name in Westlaw/Lexis |
| Reporter volume or page seems wrong for the year |
Check the reporter’s volume/page ranges for the claimed year |
| Court and year seem mismatched |
Verify the court existed and published in that reporter during that year |
| Holding is stated too perfectly for the proposition |
Read the actual case — the holding may be different |
| Multiple citations in a row all look similarly formatted |
AI tends to generate batches of citations with similar patterns |
| Case cannot be found by name or citation |
The case likely does not exist |
Platform Content Verification
For Patriot University Knowledge Base
All legal citations in the Patriot University knowledge base and skills should be verified to the following standard:
- Case citations: Verify existence, correct citation format, current authority status, and accuracy of attributed holdings
- Statutory citations: Verify current codification, check for amendments, confirm section numbering
- Regulatory citations: Verify current CFR citation, check for amendments or revocations
- Constitutional citations: Verify correct article/amendment/section/clause format
- Date-sensitive claims: Flag any claim tied to a specific date or status (e.g., “as of 2025”) for periodic review
Quality Tiers
| Tier |
Standard |
Applies To |
| Tier 1 — Court-ready |
Full Bluebook compliance, citator-verified, pinpoint-checked, quotation-verified |
Appellate briefs, motions, court filings |
| Tier 2 — Research-grade |
Existence verified, current authority confirmed, holdings accurately stated |
Research memoranda, knowledge base skills |
| Tier 3 — Educational |
Existence verified, holdings accurately stated, may use simplified citation format |
Know-your-rights materials, community education |
Recognized Citation and Legal Writing Authorities
| Authority |
Contribution |
| The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (21st ed.) |
The standard citation manual for U.S. legal writing (published by Harvard, Columbia, Penn, Yale law reviews) |
| ALWD Guide to Legal Citation (7th ed.) |
Alternative citation manual, more user-friendly, gaining adoption |
| Bryan Garner (LawProse, Inc.) |
The leading authority on legal writing style; editor of Black’s Law Dictionary |
| Richard Wydick (posthumous) |
Author of Plain English for Lawyers — foundational legal writing text |
| Ross Guberman (Legal Writing Pro) |
Author of Point Made and Point Taken; legal writing consultant |
Analysis Protocol
When checking citations:
- Read every citation. Do not skip any — even “obvious” citations can be wrong
- Verify existence first. If the authority does not exist, no further checking is needed — flag and remove
- Check authority status. Run cases through a citator. Check statutes and regulations for currency
- Verify accuracy. Does the authority say what the document claims it says? Read the actual source
- Check format. Does the citation comply with Bluebook (or applicable rules)?
- Flag all issues. Use a consistent flagging system: RED (authority does not exist or is overruled), YELLOW (negative treatment or possible inaccuracy), GREEN (verified and current)
- Report findings. Produce a citation verification report listing each citation, its status, and any issues identified
Important caveat: Citation checking is a verification function — it confirms what exists and what is accurate. It does not create legal arguments or make legal judgments. When a citation error is found, the appropriate response is to flag it for correction by the attorney or content author, not to substitute a different authority. Never fabricate or assume the existence of a case, statute, or regulation to fill a citation gap.