After a fatal incident, bills don’t wait, and uncertainty is exhausting. A calculator can seem like a shortcut to answers: “What could we receive?” “How long will it take?” “What losses count?”
The problem is that Kenosha cases often pivot on details that generic tools can’t account for—like how the incident occurred on a specific roadway, whether witnesses are available, what the traffic/scene evidence shows, and how quickly records were obtained.
An AI tool may produce a range, but it can’t confirm:
- who was legally responsible under Wisconsin standards of care
- whether the fatal outcome was caused by the other party’s actions
- what evidence can be proven in court
- how insurers will value the claim based on litigation risk


