Online tools may ask for basic facts—age, relationship to the deceased, medical bills, and general incident details—and then output a range. In Oswego cases, that can be misleading because fatal incidents frequently turn on details that automated tools can’t see, such as:
- Where the incident occurred (road design, lighting, crossings, worksite conditions, or property conditions)
- How quickly emergency response and documentation happened
- Whether the cause of death is medically supported (and how causation is explained)
- What witnesses can credibly confirm and what reports actually say
- How New York’s comparative-fault disputes may affect value
A calculator can be a starting point for questions. It can’t replace an attorney’s evaluation of liability and damages based on real evidence.


