In Anaheim, the first step often looks like this: someone receives a diagnosis after moving, retiring, or changing jobs, then realizes their illness could fit a broader environmental exposure pattern. Because many people don’t keep detailed records from years earlier, they may only have fragments—an address change, a partial medical file, or vague memories of when certain symptoms started.
You might be in that situation if:
- Your healthcare provider mentioned environmental risk factors and recommended specific documentation.
- You learned about Camp Lejeune contamination through community awareness, veterans’ resources, or family discussions.
- You’re managing ongoing conditions that have worsened over time, and you’re trying to connect earlier exposures to later health effects.
A lawyer’s job is to turn those fragments into an evidence-based case story—without guessing.


