AI tools typically use broad inputs (age, relationship, medical bills, and general incident type) to spit out a modeled number. That can feel useful—until you realize how often real-life fatal cases hinge on details like:
- Winter traction and visibility (snow, glare, and delayed braking)
- Speed and stopping distance on rural stretches outside town
- Intersection and turn violations (especially during peak commuting hours)
- Crosswalk and pedestrian activity near schools, shopping areas, and sidewalks
- Trucking and service vehicles serving local routes
- Causation disputes (whether the defendant’s act truly caused the death, or whether an intervening factor is involved)
An AI calculator can’t review the accident reconstruction, interpret Wisconsin traffic rules as applied to your facts, or evaluate what an insurance carrier will argue during settlement negotiations.


