Many tools online ask for broad numbers—age, income, dependents—and then spit out a rough range. In real wrongful death matters, the value often turns on details that a generic form can’t capture, such as:
- How fault is allocated when multiple parties may share responsibility (drivers, employers, property owners, contractors)
- Whether the medical records clearly connect the incident to the death
- What insurance coverage is available and whether policy limits are likely to cap negotiations
- How quickly evidence was preserved after the incident (important for crash documentation, surveillance, and witness availability)
In Bellefontaine, many fatalities involve vehicles on local roads, commuting corridors, or work sites tied to industrial and skilled labor. Those scenarios can create complex liability questions—especially when the facts are disputed.


