Taunton is a mix of busy commuter corridors, neighborhoods with pedestrian activity, and areas where trucks, delivery vehicles, and construction traffic overlap. When a death happens in or around those day-to-day conditions, the details matter—especially facts that influence liability.
AI tools generally ask for broad inputs (age, relationship, income, incident type) and then generate a generic range. That can break down fast when the case turns on issues like:
- Traffic signals, crosswalk use, and visibility at the time of the crash
- Distraction or speed evidence (including phone records, driving data, or witness statements)
- Comparative fault disputes—where the defense argues the deceased contributed to what happened
- Causation complexity (for example, when a fatal outcome occurs after complications)
In other words: the “math” isn’t the problem. The problem is that wrongful death claims are won or lost on proof—proof an AI calculator can’t review.


