When a death is recent, it’s natural to want a number—something that helps you predict next steps and reduce uncertainty. AI tools typically ask for a few basic details (age, relationship, medical bills, the type of incident) and then generate a “range.”
The problem is that wrongful death settlements are not determined by a general model—they turn on facts. In Flowery Branch, that often means the value depends on:
- what police reports and scene evidence show about fault (speed, lane position, driving behavior, supervision issues)
- whether causation is disputed (injuries that contributed to death vs. unrelated conditions)
- what documentation exists for expenses, wage loss, and the decedent’s work history
- how insurers frame liability and the strength of potential defenses
AI can’t review the actual record, evaluate witness credibility, or stress-test the evidence the way a Georgia case review does.


