Many AI tools work by asking for basic details (age, relationship, type of incident, some financial figures) and then generating a rough range. The problem is that fatal injury claims are rarely “plug-and-play.” In Warner Robins area cases, insurers often focus on questions like:
- What exactly caused the death—and whether the defense can argue it was unrelated or superseding
- Who is responsible when multiple actors are involved (drivers, contractors, property owners, employers)
- Whether the evidence timeline is complete (records, statements, photos, vehicle/scene data)
- How credibility issues affect liability (conflicting reports, missing witnesses, disputed accounts)
An AI estimate can’t review the police narrative, medical chronology, or documentation that supports causation. It also can’t gauge how a jury or judge in Georgia might view contested facts.


