In Conway, many people first connect the dots later—after the product has already been used at home, in a workplace, or in a shared setting. You may have kept using the item because it seemed normal, or you may have been dealing with symptoms before you learned there was a safety issue.
That timing matters. Insurance companies and defense teams often focus on gaps: when you noticed the problem, whether the product was used as intended, and whether anything changed before the recall. A lawyer can help you organize your timeline so the facts line up clearly.
Quick reality check: a recall does not automatically mean you’ll receive compensation. It can support your claim, but you still must show the recalled defect (or inadequate warnings) relates to what caused your injury.


