Online tools typically work from generic inputs (age, relationship, basic expenses) and output a suggested range. The problem is that wrongful death cases hinge on details—details that don’t fit neatly into a calculator.
In and around Haddonfield, claims often involve fact patterns like:
- High-visibility pedestrian areas and crosswalks where driver attention and stopping distance become central
- Commuter traffic on nearby roadways, where speed, lane positioning, and reaction time are heavily disputed
- Residential streets and driveways where “who had the duty to act” can be contested
An AI tool can’t review police narratives, video, scene measurements, or witness credibility. It also can’t account for whether New Jersey defenses will argue comparative fault, intervening causes, or gaps in causation.


