In suburban communities like Woodbury, it’s common for people to have strong memories of diagnoses but scattered documentation—particularly when care was spread across multiple clinics, specialists, or years. Some claimants also served, trained, or worked in military-related roles before relocating, so the “where and when” details can become fuzzy.
That’s why our intake emphasizes three practical items:
- A clean exposure timeline (service/residence/work locations and date ranges)
- A medical chronology (when symptoms began, how diagnoses progressed)
- Supportable documentation (records that confirm both timing and treatment)
Even if you already searched online for an “AI camp lejeune lawyer” or a “camp lejeune legal bot,” the next step still requires attorney review—because the legal question is not whether an illness is serious, but whether the evidence can reasonably support a connection tied to the relevant exposure period.


