In and around Fife, fatal incidents often unfold quickly: an impact on a corridor, a sudden change near a work zone, impaired visibility at night, or a collision involving commercial vehicles. In those situations, the facts that drive value—who was actually at fault, what caused the fatal outcome, and what losses are provable—are rarely fully known when an AI tool is first used.
An estimator may ask for basic inputs (age, relationship, medical costs), but it can’t evaluate the real disputes that show up in Washington claims, such as:
- whether the driver’s actions were negligent or reckless under the facts
- whether another party’s conduct (including a contractor or employer) contributed
- whether the injuries that preceded death are documented clearly enough for damages
- whether insurance coverage is available for the responsible party
That’s why the best use of any calculator is as a prompt to organize questions—not as a substitute for a legal evaluation.


