When someone in the Bay Area, including Petaluma, begins researching a potential Camp Lejeune connection, the first challenge is usually practical—not legal. It’s figuring out:
- which documents exist,
- which ones are incomplete or hard to interpret,
- and how symptoms line up with the dates you were stationed or living near affected water systems.
That’s especially common when families discover health concerns years later, or when medical care was spread across multiple clinics over time. A “quick answer” from an internet search may feel reassuring, but it can also lead to missing documents that later become important.


