Flower Mound is a suburban community where many fatal incidents involve commuting corridors, intersections, and high-speed roadway merges—and those cases often turn on details that calculators can’t see.
An AI tool may ask for basic information and then spit out a “range.” The problem is that wrongful death negotiations rarely hinge on averages. They hinge on questions like:
- What specific evidence shows fault (not just what “seems likely”)?
- Was the fatal outcome caused by one event, or by a chain of events?
- Are there multiple responsible parties (common in roadway cases involving contractors or fleet vehicles)?
- Did the family lose key documentation early (dashcam footage, event recorder data, witness availability)?
In other words: the number may look confident, but the case value is only as strong as the proof behind it.


