Edmonds families commonly face fact patterns where causation and responsibility become intensely specific:
- Traffic and commuting collisions where fault may hinge on lane changes, speed, visibility, or distraction.
- Pedestrian and crosswalk incidents where the dispute can involve timing, lighting, signaling, and roadway design.
- Tourism and event-related traffic where congestion and driving behavior shift around peak hours.
An AI tool may ask for the basics—age, relationship, and some financial figures—but it typically can’t evaluate the Washington evidence that insurers rely on: incident reports, witness credibility, vehicle data, timing, and medical records that connect injuries to the death.
That’s why a calculator should be treated like a starting question list, not a settlement prediction.


