Online tools often ask for a few broad inputs—age, income, dependents—and then apply a generic multiplier. That approach breaks down quickly in real cases because the settlement number is driven by what can be proven.
In Crown Point, the details that commonly change case value include:
- How the incident happened on local roadways (intersection visibility, traffic-control compliance, lane changes, speeding, distraction)
- Timing and medical evidence (what records show about the cause of death and whether complications were foreseeable)
- Who is actually responsible (driver vs. employer vs. property owner vs. manufacturer; sometimes more than one)
- Insurance limits (even strong cases may be constrained by coverage)
A lawyer’s job isn’t to “plug in numbers”—it’s to build a claim that matches the evidence and the legal elements required for recovery.


