Most AI tools work by taking a few inputs—age, relationship, general expenses—and producing a “range.” The problem is that wrongful death claims aren’t built from averages. They’re built from proof.
In Leavenworth, the details that determine liability are often the same details a calculator can’t reliably model, such as:
- What actually happened at the scene (and what reports say versus what video/data shows)
- How causation is supported when injuries are severe or complications develop later
- Whether multiple parties (drivers, employers, property owners, contractors) share fault
- Whether witness accounts and documentation are consistent enough to withstand an insurance investigation
AI estimates also can’t account for how insurers in real cases assess litigation risk—for example, whether the defense believes the case will survive motions, how they anticipate a jury will view credibility, or what policy coverage applies.


