A recall is a public safety action—but it’s not the same thing as a settlement offer. In Rogers-area cases, disputes often start when insurers argue the recall is “general,” the product you had wasn’t part of the specific recall, or your injury resulted from something else (like misuse, installation issues, or another cause).
What changes your outcome is whether you can connect three things clearly:
- Your exact product matches the recall scope (model/serial/lot details matter).
- The recall addresses a hazard consistent with what injured you.
- Your injuries and treatment records support that the hazard caused harm.
A lawyer’s job is to translate the recall notice into a case theory that’s backed by evidence—not just headlines.


