Most AI calculators work like this: they ask for basic information (age, type of incident, relationship, and some expenses), then generate a “range” based on broad patterns. That can be misleading in Salem because fatal cases here often involve issues that don’t fit neatly into averages—like:
- Complex crash causation (speed, impairment, lane changes, braking distance, or roadway conditions)
- Timeline disputes (what happened first, and what medical evidence supports the connection between the incident and death)
- Multiple potential responsible parties (drivers, employers, contractors, property owners, or product/service providers)
A calculator can’t review police supplements, obtain vehicle/trucking logs, evaluate medical causation, or pressure-test whether the defense’s explanation holds up.


