Westland sits among busy commuting corridors and heavy traffic patterns—conditions that can make early facts especially important. In the days and weeks after a fatal incident, details like traffic control timing, braking/impact evidence, witness statements, and event reconstruction can change how fault is allocated.
AI tools typically work from simplified inputs (age, relationship, general expenses) and may assume liability is clear. In real cases, insurers in Michigan frequently focus on:
- Disputed causation (what actually caused the fatal outcome)
- Comparative fault arguments (whether the decedent or others contributed)
- Policy and coverage issues (especially in multi-party crashes)
- Document gaps (missing records, unclear timelines, incomplete scene evidence)
That’s why an “estimate” can feel accurate at first—until the legal evaluation begins and the evidence either strengthens or undermines the claim.


