In and around Shaker Heights, fatal cases often grow out of high-stakes driving conditions: commuter traffic, changing weather, intersections with heavy turning movements, and pedestrians moving near residential streets and nearby commercial corridors. An AI tool typically can’t account for:
- How the collision occurred (lane position, turn signals, speed evidence, braking/impact data)
- Whether a pedestrian or cyclist was involved and what visibility conditions existed
- Causation disputes (what actually caused the death—immediate injury vs. later complications)
- Evidence quality (what officers documented, what video/surveillance exists, what was preserved)
That’s why a calculator should be treated as a starting prompt, not a decision-maker. Families in Ohio deserve legal guidance that connects the incident timeline to what a claim must prove.


