AI tools typically work by taking a few inputs—age, relationship, medical bills, and general incident categories—and producing a range. The problem is that wrongful death recoveries depend heavily on what can be proven.
In New Orleans, the “proof” piece often turns on details like:
- Traffic and intersection dynamics (right-of-way disputes, visibility, speeding, or distracted driving)
- Pedestrian and crosswalk evidence in dense, walkable areas
- Event-related conditions, such as crowds, altered traffic patterns, and delayed emergency response access
- Construction and roadway work changing lanes, signage, or turning paths
- Causation timing, where the death occurs days or weeks later and defenses argue an intervening cause
An AI estimate can’t review police reports, obtain surveillance footage, interpret crash reconstruction, or evaluate medical causation in the way a Louisiana attorney can.


