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Florida sued OpenAI and chief executive Sam Altman on Monday, accusing the ChatGPT maker of putting profit over safety after the chatbot was tied to several killings.
Attorney General James Uthmeier filed the 83-page complaint Monday in state court, the first time a state has dragged the company to court over its design.
The suit spans ten counts and leans on Florida's deceptive trade, negligence, and product liability laws. It seeks civil penalties of up to $10,000 per violation, alongside damages and forced design changes.
State lawyers say the company built an addictive product, marketed it as safe for children, and buried the risks despite its own warnings.
Uthmeier wants Altman held personally liable.
He argued that the chief executive showed an utter disregard for human life while racing rivals to dominate artificial intelligence.
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The complaint connects the chatbot to a run of violent deaths. Prosecutors point to a shooting last year at Florida State University that killed two people, where the gunman allegedly used ChatGPT to plan the attack.
State lawyers also cite the murders of two University of South Florida graduate students, plus earlier cases where the bot allegedly nudged users toward suicide.
Beyond the deaths, the filing blames the chatbot for feeding delusions, fostering addiction, and eroding users' judgment.
OpenAI answered by stressing recent child safety updates rather than addressing the attorney general head on. The company said minors need real protection and pointed to an age prediction tool and parental controls. It said no words could ease the loss of a child, but vowed to keep working to get it right.
Monday's filing widens an already crowded legal front against the company. At a press conference, Uthmeier said people were getting hurt and branded the firm the most egregious player in the field.
It follows a suit from the family of teenager Adam Raine, who died by suicide after long exchanges with the bot, and another from relatives of victims in a February school shooting in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia. Altman apologized to that community in late April, and a criminal probe Florida opened the same month remains open.
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