Foley’s daily life involves a lot of product exposure—at home, on the road, and during busy seasons when families and visitors are out and about. That creates common recall-injury patterns, such as:
- Cars and accessories used for commuting or errands (problems tied to safety defects, installation issues, or model/batch limitations)
- Household items affected by overheating, malfunction, or failure under normal use (especially in coastal humidity where maintenance and storage can matter)
- Products used by children and caregivers (injuries where warning labels and age-appropriate use are heavily disputed)
- Medical or health-related products where symptoms may not be immediate and timelines become critical
In these situations, insurers and defense teams often focus on the same questions early: Did you have the recalled version? Were you using it as intended? Did something else cause the injury? A focused attorney review helps you answer those questions with documents and records—not guesswork.


