Disclaimer.
Not legal advice
AI Accusation Help (aiaccusationhelp.com) provides general information and support for students who believe they have been wrongly accused of using AI on coursework. This site does not provide legal advice. Academic-integrity procedures vary by institution, state, and country, and the specifics of any individual case can change the answer to any general question on this site. For high-stakes situations — visa, scholarship, expulsion, professional licensure — consult a licensed attorney or qualified advisor.
Jurisdiction limits
The information on this site primarily covers higher-education contexts in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia. We have made best efforts to present accurate jurisdiction-specific guidance, but laws and institutional policies change. If you are studying in another country, the general principles (preserve process evidence, request specific evidence of the accusation, use your institution's appeal process) usually still apply, but the specific rights and resources will differ.
Sample letters and templates
Any sample appeal letter, sample email, or other template on this site is provided as a starting structure. Templates are not a substitute for adapting language to your specific case. Read the template, change the wording so it reflects your actual facts, and verify every claim against your own situation before sending anything.
Defense Assistant — what it does and does not do
The Defense Assistant tool is a deterministic 5-step intake form. It runs entirely in your browser. It does not send your answers anywhere. It does not call an AI model. It does not store your responses on a server. When you click "Build my defense plan," the tool generates a plan from a fixed set of rules and your input. Closing the page or refreshing it discards your answers.
The plan is a starting point — an evidence checklist, an appeal-letter outline, jurisdiction-specific notes, what NOT to say, and resource pointers. It is not a substitute for legal counsel, and it is not a finished defense. You will need to adapt it to your specific facts.
No vendor affiliation
This site has no commercial relationship, partnership, sponsorship, or affiliation with any AI-detector vendor, including but not limited to Turnitin, GPTZero, Originality.ai, Copyleaks, and others. We name vendors only for informational purposes — to help you understand the tool being used in your accusation. We do not promote, sell, or recommend any detector.
No ads, no affiliate links
This site does not run advertising. It does not use affiliate links. It does not sell user data. There is no commercial conversion goal beyond helping students. (If we ever add a way to support the project — for example, a way to donate to keep the site online — it will be disclosed prominently and will not affect the editorial content.)
Reviewer status
Until a named education-law attorney or academic-integrity professional has reviewed this site's content, the footer carries a "Reviewer pending" notice. We are reaching out to qualified reviewers and will add a named reviewer publicly when one is attached.
Accuracy and corrections
Every numerical claim, named case, and percentage on this site carries a primary source on the sources page. If you find an error, a stale link, or an updated primary source that contradicts something on this site, please write so we can correct or revise. Contact: [email protected].
Privacy and data
The site does not require an account, does not require an email address, and does not track individual users with cookies for advertising. Basic server logs (used to keep the site online) are kept by the hosting infrastructure (Cloudflare) and are not used for profiling.
External links
Outbound links to vendor documentation, academic studies, university statements, free legal resources, and news articles are provided for verification. We are not responsible for the content of external sites, and inclusion of a link does not constitute endorsement of any party beyond the specific fact being cited.
Last reviewed
June 6, 2026. The site is reviewed at least quarterly and updated as primary sources are revised, lawsuits are decided, or institutional policies change.