AI-style tools can be useful for organizing information, but they often fail when the case involves the kinds of scenarios common in West New York—like:
- High-traffic collisions where head impacts are disputed or liability is contested
- Pedestrian and crosswalk incidents where insurers argue warning signs or visibility
- Construction-adjacent accidents where hazards, lane shifts, or signage may be questioned
- Commuter schedule pressure that leads people to return to work or skip care—creating gaps the defense may exploit
In New Jersey injury claims, those details matter because insurers frequently challenge causation (whether the symptoms tie back to the incident) and severity (how long symptoms lasted and how limiting they were). A calculator can’t review police reports, witness credibility, treatment continuity, or the specific way your injury shows up in your work performance.


