Airmont is a suburban community where people balance work commutes, school schedules, and regular healthcare appointments. That lifestyle can make it harder to gather documents and keep a consistent timeline—especially when symptoms appear years after exposure.
Many clients come to us with the same situation: they found information about Camp Lejeune after a diagnosis, they’ve started collecting medical records, and they’re unsure what actually matters for a claim. Meanwhile, New York’s procedural expectations and document-request timelines mean delays can create avoidable gaps.
A local, attorney-led approach helps you:
- organize your service/residence history in a usable way,
- connect diagnoses to exposure windows with credible medical support,
- and avoid missteps that can slow or weaken a case.


