AI tools typically work by taking a few inputs (age, relationship, medical costs, lost income) and projecting a generalized outcome. In real wrongful death cases, the “real math” is driven by what can be proven in court:
- Whether someone was actually at fault for the fatal injury (and what Oklahoma standards apply to that duty)
- Whether the evidence supports causation—not just that the person died, but that the defendant’s conduct caused the death in a legally recognized way
- What damages are documented (receipts, wage records, treatment timelines, and expert support when needed)
- How insurers assess risk based on the case record, not on averages
So two families in Tahlequah can enter the same online calculator and get very different “ranges,” because the calculator can’t see the incident reports, witness statements, or the disputes that often decide outcomes.


