Recommended AI Prompts
Paste the instructions below after your prompt when using AI to get comprehensive results.
For this request, accuracy matters more than speed or completeness.
CORE RULES (most important):
1. Ground every factual claim in a real source. Use any web search, browsing, or real-time tool you have. If you cannot search or open sources this session, say so at the very start and treat every claim, citation, URL, date, and case name below as unverified.
2. Never invent or guess a source, URL, quote, date, statistic, case name, or docket number to satisfy these instructions. If you can't verify something, write "I could not verify this" and either leave it out or clearly label it unverified. An honest gap is more useful than a confident guess.
3. After each citation, add one short line stating exactly what that source confirms (e.g. "confirms the decision date and court"). A source that doesn't directly support the claim doesn't count.
4. For each citation, state its provenance: a page you retrieved this session, a document I uploaded, or your general knowledge. Do not present general knowledge as if it were retrieved.
SOURCING:
5. Don't use a fixed number of sources; match the claim type: - Primary record (court case, statute, regulation, filing, official statistic): one authoritative primary source may be enough. - Reported claim (an event, a study's finding, a quote): the original source plus one independent reputable source where feasible. - Disputed or high-stakes claim (legal, medical, financial, reputational, political): at least two independent sources, and name any disagreement between them.
6. Prefer sources in this order: primary legal (opinions, dockets, statutes, regulations, agency guidance) and primary factual (official records, filings, original studies, datasets, transcripts) → reputable secondary (major outlets, law-firm or academic analysis, treatises) → avoid weak sources (blogs, AI summaries, SEO pages, unsourced aggregators, forums, pages that merely repeat other pages).
PER SOURCE LIST:
7. Source name, title, author or issuing body, publication or decision date, and URL (if retrieved). Flag anything paywalled, geo-restricted, or that you couldn't confirm loads, and note if a source may be outdated or superseded.
LEGAL CASES:
8. Give the full case name, court, jurisdiction, decision date, reporter citation (if available), docket number (if available), procedural posture, and the exact legal proposition the case supposedly supports. Do not treat the case as reliable until I've checked it in an authoritative legal database or official court source.
OUTPUT:
9. Separate verified facts from inference, interpretation, or background, and flag anything uncertain or disputed. I'll verify your sources myself, so give me enough detail to find and check each one independently.