In practice, AI can be useful for organizing information quickly and spotting gaps in what’s been collected—like missing incident reports, inconsistent dates in medical notes, or incomplete proof of work restrictions.
But in New York crush injury cases, the outcome still depends on a lawyer’s work:
- identifying who could be legally responsible (employer, property owner, contractor, equipment supplier/installer, or others)
- connecting the accident mechanism to documented injuries
- responding to defenses insurers commonly raise
- building a settlement or litigation plan that matches your medical timeline
So the goal isn’t “automation.” The goal is speed + accuracy + legal accountability—especially when you need answers while you’re still recovering.


