The blame game over AI hallucinations in court filings has started Getty Images A personal injury lawyer apologized for filing court documents with fabricated quotations. The lawyer told the judge that he had begun using software from a venture-backed startup called Eve. The episode highlights a growing risk for the startups selling artificial intelligence to lawyers. Lawyers keep getting burned by artificial intelligence that invents cases and makes up quotes. Now, some attorneys are naming the software they used. Last month, a Louisiana personal injury lawyer apologized after submitting briefs that cited a real court decision but quoted passages that didn't exist. The mistakes appeared in two filings in the 19th Judicial District Court in Baton Rouge and were flagged by opposing counsel. "I'm trying to understand how I made this mistake," Ross LeBlanc, a partner at Dudley DeBosier, wrote in a private letter to Judge William Jorden on March 27.…