Many families start with a tool that promises a “range” or “ballpark.” Those calculators typically rely on inputs like age, income, and incident type. The problem is that wrongful death recoveries don’t turn on numbers alone.
In real Trenton cases, the outcome can hinge on issues that AI tools can’t properly weigh, such as:
- How Michigan fault is argued when multiple parties may be involved (drivers, employers, contractors, equipment owners)
- Whether causation is disputed—for example, a defense may claim the death resulted from an independent medical condition rather than the incident
- What documentation exists early (scene reports, medical timelines, employment records, and witness accounts)
- How insurance carriers evaluate litigation risk, not just the claimed losses
AI may be able to generate a “possible payout,” but it cannot review the documents, identify gaps, or predict how a defense will contest liability and damages.


