Many people in Tifton first discover a recall through a mail notice, a store update, or an online search—sometimes long after the initial injury. If that sounds familiar, the best next step is not to wait and hope the problem “fixes itself.” Instead:
- Get medical care and follow-up documentation. Your treatment records become the foundation for proving the injury and its connection to the incident.
- Preserve product identifiers. Keep the model/serial number, lot code, packaging, and any paperwork.
- Save the recall information you received. Screenshots, letters, and links showing recall dates and scope can be critical.
- Write down a timeline while it’s fresh. Include when you bought/received the product, when the injury happened, symptoms, treatment visits, and when you learned about the recall.
Georgia law requires injured people to act within applicable deadlines. While every case is different, delaying too long can make it harder to obtain evidence and can affect your ability to file.


