AI tools generally work by plugging in a few facts and returning a range. That can feel useful after a crash, a workplace incident, or a medical emergency—but Fayetteville wrongful death matters frequently turn on issues that a generic calculator can’t model, such as:
- Complex fault in multi-party incidents (for example, when more than one driver, contractor, or property party may share responsibility)
- Causation disputes—when the defense argues the death wasn’t caused by the incident or that intervening factors broke the chain
- Documentation gaps—which are common when families are dealing with urgent medical decisions, emergency services, and rapidly changing information
Instead of treating an AI output as a forecast, use it as a checklist: what information you’ll need to gather to evaluate liability and damages with a lawyer.


