Many online tools are built to respond to inputs like age, income, and “type of incident.” That can be useful as a starting point. But wrongful death settlements are typically driven by issues that AI can’t verify:
- Who was at fault on a specific road segment (and how fault is argued under Texas law)
- What evidence was preserved after the crash or incident—dashcam/video, phone data, witness statements, maintenance records, or event footage
- Whether the cause of death is supported by medical records and expert review (especially when there’s a delay between injury and death)
- What insurance coverage applies—policy limits, exclusions, and whether multiple parties may share responsibility
In other words: an AI “range” can’t see the scene, review the records, or evaluate credibility. In Eagle Pass, that gap matters because accidents often involve moving parts—multiple vehicles, commercial traffic, pedestrians near busy areas, or disputes about speed, lane position, and distraction.


