After a death, families often face immediate financial pressure: medical bills before the passing, funeral and burial costs, missed work, and uncertainty about long-term support.
AI tools can seem helpful because they:
- ask for basic details (age, relationship, type of incident)
- generate a rough range
- suggest which categories of losses might apply
The problem is that fatal cases are rarely “average.” In El Monte, where residents rely on dense road networks and where commercial activity is common, liability can hinge on details like lane positioning, signal timing, vehicle maintenance records, speed estimates, witness credibility, or safety practices at worksites.
A calculator can’t review police reports, obtain surveillance video, analyze collision reconstruction, or evaluate whether a defense will argue another cause.


