AI tools typically work by applying formulas to the facts you type in. That can be helpful for brainstorming, but it’s not designed to reflect the realities that come up in Norridge wrongful death cases—such as:
- Intersection and traffic evidence (signal timing, speed, lane position, braking distance)
- Multiple-vehicle/road-participant issues common in suburban commuting patterns
- Disputed causation (for example, whether the fatal outcome was caused by the incident or by later medical complications)
- Insurance-driven negotiations that depend on litigation risk, not just “loss totals”
In other words: an AI wrongful death payout calculator may produce a range, but it can’t review the accident reconstruction, medical records, or witness credibility that Illinois courts and juries rely on.


