You may have seen prompts online about AI reviewing DUI evidence or generating legal summaries. Those tools can be useful for organizing facts—for example, helping you compile a timeline of what happened, what you were told at the ER, and which documents you already have.
But in Denver DUI injury cases, something matters more than speed: a lawyer must connect the dots between impairment indicators, crash mechanics, and the injuries you actually sustained. AI can’t reliably assess credibility, spot evidentiary gaps, confirm whether key records were properly handled, or handle negotiations and filings under Colorado rules.
Think of AI as a filing assistant—not the person who will advocate for compensation.


