AI tools usually generate a “range” based on the details you type in. That can be helpful for asking questions, but it can also be misleading because wrongful death outcomes turn on things like:
- Who was at fault and how fault is proven (including shared-fault arguments)
- Causation—whether the defendant’s conduct actually caused the death, not just the injury
- Insurance posture—what the insurer is willing to pay versus what they plan to dispute
- The quality of documents available early (reports, recordings, witness info, medical records)
In Peoria, we frequently see cases where the incident record is complex—think multi-vehicle traffic events on major corridors, pedestrian involvement near retail areas, or workplace tragedies where safety documentation becomes central. An AI tool can’t evaluate those records or anticipate how defenses will attack them.


