AI tools typically work by taking a few inputs—age, relationship, medical bills, and basic case type—and returning a range. That approach breaks down when local facts matter most, such as:
- Conflicting crash or incident accounts (common when visibility is poor or multiple witnesses interpret events differently)
- Delayed discovery of key records (medical timelines, surveillance availability, or employer/contractor documentation)
- Third-party involvement (property owners, contractors, insurers, or employers) that changes who may be responsible
- Seasonal traffic and pedestrian activity that can affect how investigators reconstruct events
In other words, an AI calculator may provide a number, but it can’t weigh the specific evidence that Connecticut courts and juries rely on.


