In wrongful death matters, “the numbers” depend on evidence: what caused the fatal injury, who should be held responsible, what damages are supported, and what defenses are likely to be raised.
An AI tool typically can’t:
- review police reports and crash reconstruction materials,
- interpret conflicting witness accounts,
- evaluate whether a driver’s conduct met Illinois negligence standards,
- confirm which expenses are legally tied to the fatal outcome,
- or anticipate how insurance adjusters will respond to liability and causation.
For Marion families, that matters because the circumstances often hinge on specifics—like lighting conditions, speed, lane placement, roadway visibility, distraction, or whether a pedestrian or cyclist was properly seen and protected.
Bottom line: an AI “range” may feel comforting, but it can also steer families toward the wrong expectations.


