Many Camp Lejeune cases don’t fail because someone is “missing a diagnosis.” They stall because the story is hard to prove when key dates are scattered across years and providers—something that’s common for people who moved, changed jobs, or received care in multiple states.
In Minot, it’s also common for claimants to juggle work schedules, travel for specialist appointments, and family responsibilities. That can make it easy to delay record requests or overlook documents that matter later—like visit summaries that mention suspected causes, medication timelines, or discharge paperwork.
Specter Legal helps clients translate that real-life chaos into a coherent legal timeline:
- Where exposure could have occurred (service/residence history)
- When symptoms started and how they evolved
- What clinicians documented and how diagnoses were described over time


