Snoqualmie is shaped by commuting patterns, seasonal traffic, and a mix of residential streets and busier travel corridors. That matters because wrongful death outcomes hinge on details like:
- What speed, visibility, and roadway conditions show in available reports and data
- How witnesses describe the moments leading up to impact (or a workplace incident)
- Whether multiple parties may be responsible (drivers, employers, property owners, contractors, or maintenance providers)
- What Washington records exist and how quickly they can be obtained
AI tools usually assume a “typical” fact pattern. Real cases don’t behave typically—especially when insurers dispute causation or argue comparative responsibility.
Instead of asking, “What number should I get?”, a better question is: What evidence do we have, what evidence is missing, and what damages categories are actually supported?


