Many families in Sidney start with an automated tool because it feels practical: enter a few facts, receive a range, and move on. The problem is that fatal cases rarely fit the simplified assumptions calculators use.
In the real world, Ohio wrongful death outcomes commonly hinge on details like:
- How fault is supported by crash reports, witness testimony, and physical evidence
- Whether the death was caused by the incident (not just connected to it)
- What insurance coverage applies, including whether the responsible party is insured
- Whether shared fault is likely (defenses may argue the decedent contributed in some way)
If those facts aren’t firmly established, an AI tool can’t “fill in the gaps” reliably.


