Most calculators work by prompting you for basic details—who died, what incident occurred, and some financial information—then producing a suggested range. The issue is that wrongful death outcomes don’t turn only on generic inputs.
In Natchez, the difference often comes down to details like:
- How and where the incident occurred (intersection vs. roadway curve, visibility issues, pedestrian activity, commercial pickup/drop-off areas)
- Whether emergency response and documentation are consistent (timelines, reports, and records)
- Whether fault is likely disputed (witness accounts, conflicting statements, or missing maintenance evidence)
- What happened after the injury (some deaths occur quickly; others come days or weeks later, which can change causation questions)
An AI tool can’t inspect reports, evaluate credibility, or determine whether evidence in your situation supports the legal theory that leads to recovery.


