Many people in the northern suburbs first learn about Camp Lejeune years after service or residence. By the time symptoms show up, life has changed—addresses, employers, physicians, and even the details of where you lived or worked can become harder to reconstruct.
A lawyer’s first job is often not “arguing the science,” but building a credible timeline that matches the evidence available. In practice, that means:
- identifying where you were stationed or housed during the relevant period
- collecting medical records that show diagnosis dates and treatment history
- confirming whether symptoms appeared soon after exposure or developed later
Illinois claimants frequently face the same hurdle: information is spread across providers, systems, and paper files. Sorting it into a coherent case narrative helps prevent avoidable delays.


