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Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier on April 21 opened a criminal investigation into OpenAI and its ChatGPT chatbot, saying a review of chat logs suggests the AI may have offered “significant advice” to the man accused of the April 17, 2025 Florida State University shooting.
Prosecutors say the exchanges with accused gunman Phoenix Ikner included questions about which weapon and ammunition to use, whether a gun would be effective at short range, and when and where campus footfall would be highest.
Uthmeier’s office has issued subpoenas seeking internal policies and training materials from March 1, 2024 through April 17, 2026, records on cooperation with law enforcement, organizational charts and employee lists tied to ChatGPT. The criminal inquiry runs alongside an existing civil probe; families of victims have indicated plans to sue.
OpenAI said it is cooperating, that it identified an account believed linked to the suspect and that ChatGPT provided factual responses and did not encourage illegal activity.
The case raises novel questions about corporate and developer liability for AI outputs as the shooter—facing murder and attempted-murder charges—awaits trial scheduled for October.







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