Many serious wrongful death incidents in and around Verona involve what residents know well: commuting routes, school-area traffic, and vehicles sharing space with pedestrians and bicyclists.
When the fatal incident involves a crash, the “calculator inputs” people usually see online—age, income, and relationship—are only part of the story. In practice, the case turns on locally relevant evidence such as:
- Crash reports and citations (who was cited, and for what)
- Scene documentation (skid marks, lane positioning, signals, and visibility)
- Dashcam or nearby surveillance (common near busy corridors)
- Medical records showing the injury timeline
- Vehicle maintenance and inspection history (when mechanical issues are alleged)
A calculator can’t review those items. A lawyer’s job is to connect the evidence to Wisconsin legal standards so the claim is valued based on what can actually be proven.


