Many injuries aren’t connected to a recall at first. A few common Dixon-area scenarios we see include:
- Car- or mobility-related injuries tied to recalled components (seat hardware, child safety gear, or aftermarket accessories used locally at home or during errands).
- Home and yard product injuries—power tools, heaters, appliances, or household items that fail in a way that causes burns, lacerations, or smoke exposure.
- Workday exposure for people who spend time on-site (warehouses, construction-adjacent settings, or industrial maintenance), where documentation and timelines are essential even if the injury seems “minor” at first.
After a recall notice arrives, the real problem is often proving the connection: which unit you had, what defect the recall describes, and how that defect caused your specific injuries.


