An AI calculator generally works by taking the details you enter (age, relationship, medical bills, and the type of incident) and producing a range. That can be useful for getting your bearings.
But in Scottsboro wrongful death matters—especially those tied to commuting traffic, highway travel, worksite incidents, or pedestrian risk near busy corridors—the details that drive value are often the same details calculators can’t reliably model:
- Who had the duty of care in the specific situation (driver, property owner, employer, contractor, medical provider)
- Whether the fatal harm was caused by the defendant’s conduct, not something else
- How strong the evidence is right now (dashcam/video availability, witness identifications, scene documentation, records)
- What Alabama law requires for the claim to move forward and how timing affects leverage
In other words, a calculator may offer a starting point, but it can’t replace a legal evaluation of liability and damages based on real documents.


