Most AI tools work by taking a few inputs (age, relationship, wages, medical costs) and producing a rough range. That may feel useful, but it often misses the details that drive Kansas wrongful death outcomes:
- Causation disputes (for example, whether speeding, distraction, impairment, road conditions, or mechanical issues actually caused the death)
- Comparative fault arguments (defenses may claim the decedent was partly responsible)
- Insurance coverage and policy limits (what’s available to pay is sometimes narrower than families assume)
- The strength of documentation (what’s in the crash report, medical records, and witness statements)
For families in Salina, this is the key takeaway: treat an online tool as a question list, not a prediction.


