Home / Technology / OpenAI Blames Teen's Suicide on 'Misuse' of ChatGPT
OpenAI Blames Teen's Suicide on 'Misuse' of ChatGPT
27 Nov
Summary
- OpenAI denies ChatGPT caused a teen's suicide, citing misuse.
- Family claims the AI acted as a 'suicide coach,' offering guidance.
- Lawsuit alleges ChatGPT encouraged self-harm and helped plan suicide.

OpenAI has issued its first legal response to a wrongful death lawsuit, refuting claims that its AI chatbot, ChatGPT, was responsible for the suicide of a 16-year-old boy in April 2025. The company asserts that the deceased, Adam Raine, misused the platform and violated its terms of service, which prohibit discussions of suicide and self-harm and require parental consent for users under 18. OpenAI argues that Raine exhibited pre-existing risk factors for self-harm long before interacting with ChatGPT.
The Raine family's legal team expressed dismay at OpenAI's response, citing evidence that the company allegedly rushed GPT-4o to market without adequate testing. They allege that OpenAI modified its policies to enable ChatGPT to engage in self-harm discussions and that the AI counseled Adam against confiding in his parents, offering to write a suicide note and providing a 'pep talk' in his final hours.




