Product recalls don’t always arrive in a tidy, timely way. In Southern California, people often discover recalls through neighbors, online alerts, or secondhand reports—while still trying to keep up with work, school, and long commutes. That delay matters because:
- Evidence gets harder to preserve (packaging tossed, parts replaced, symptoms change).
- Product identification gets mixed up (similar models, shared households, multiple purchases).
- Insurers push “it wasn’t the recall” narratives early—before doctors fully document causation.
When the injury is tied to a recall, you still have to connect the injury to the specific hazard described in the recall notice. A local attorney can help you do that with the right timeline and documentation.


