Many AI tools work by plugging a few inputs (age, incident type, income) into a generic model. That approach breaks down when the hardest parts of a wrongful death case are the ones the tool can’t accurately see—such as:
- What caused the crash or fatal incident (and what the defense disputes)
- Whether the responsible party is identifiable (drivers, contractors, equipment owners, property owners)
- The quality of documentation available from the scene and afterward
- Wisconsin-specific dispute patterns, where insurers frequently challenge causation and damages early
In Two Rivers, common fact patterns can include fatal incidents on higher-traffic stretches, intersection collisions, and near-construction slowdowns where visibility and traffic control become central. Those details don’t fit neatly into an online calculator.


