People in Central New Jersey commonly begin with fragments: a partial medical history, a few service details, and memories that aren’t organized by date. That’s especially true for families who moved, changed providers, or stored records across years.
For Camp Lejeune matters, timeline matters because exposure window and symptom progression are central to whether a claim is evaluated as plausible. If your documents don’t line up cleanly—addresses, facility location, diagnosis dates, or treatment milestones—your claim can stall even if you’re experiencing serious health effects.
A lawyer’s job is to help you:
- identify which dates and records are most probative,
- obtain missing documentation efficiently,
- and present a consistent exposure-and-medical story.


