Most AI tools work by taking a few inputs and producing a rough “range.” That can be emotionally tempting when bills are piling up. However, these tools typically can’t see the documents that matter, such as:
- The crash report and cited violations (or disputes about them)
- Lighting, speed, braking distance, and roadway conditions
- Vehicle data/telematics (when available)
- Medical records that explain the injury-to-death timeline
- Evidence about seatbelt use, distraction, impairment, or maintenance
In Shelton—where severe injuries may result from commuting traffic, construction work zones, delivery traffic, and nighttime activity—insurers often argue that the death was caused by something other than the defendant’s conduct, or that fault should be shared. An AI estimate rarely accounts for those disputes.
Bottom line: a calculator may help you ask better questions, but it cannot replace a lawyer’s evaluation of liability, damages, and the evidence you actually have.


