AI tools typically work from a short list of inputs—age, relationship, income, and incident type—and then generate a range. That can feel reassuring, but it can also flatten the details that matter most.
In Washington wrongful death matters, the outcome often turns on questions an online tool can’t answer well, such as:
- Whether the fatal harm was caused by the defendant’s actions (and not a competing factor)
- Whether witness accounts and incident reports are consistent
- Whether the available records support the timeline of injuries and death
- How insurers frame liability—especially when multiple parties were involved
For families dealing with a fatal crash during commute hours, a worksite incident, or a pedestrian/vehicle tragedy near residential routes, small factual differences can shift settlement leverage dramatically.


