Online tools usually rely on broad inputs (age, income, dependents) and generic multipliers. In Baldwin, the facts that most often change settlement value tend to be case-specific and evidence-driven—especially when the death follows:
- Commute-related crashes on nearby corridors and interchanges (speed, lane changes, distractions, visibility)
- Pedestrian or roadway incidents near residential streets and busy intersections
- Worksite and industrial accidents involving contractors, equipment, or safety procedures
- Medical and caregiving failures that require careful documentation
That means the strongest “valuation driver” in Baldwin cases is usually not the math—it’s whether the family can prove liability and causation with records and witness support.


