Many people search for a “wrongful death payout calculator” after a fatal crash or sudden death. The problem is that AI tools typically assume a simplified story:
- They treat liability as “average,” even though Ohio cases often turn on disputed fault—speed, lane position, distraction, impairment, or maintenance history.
- They rely on generic loss formulas, even though the real damages analysis depends on proof like pay stubs, benefit records, medical billing, and documentation of caregiving responsibilities.
- They can’t account for causation fights, which are common when the defense argues the death resulted from something other than the incident.
In Green, the commuting reality matters. Cases involving multi-lane traffic, merges, long brake distances, or weather/visibility conditions often produce complex evidence—dashcam footage, traffic unit reports, scene diagrams, and sometimes expert review.
An AI estimate can’t interpret that record. A lawyer can.


