In a suburban community like Shiloh, many recall-related injuries happen in everyday settings: kitchens, garages, shared household spaces, workplaces, or vehicles used for daily commuting. That matters because early documentation is often the difference between a claim that moves and a claim that stalls.
When a recall comes out—whether the notice is tied to a specific model, lot, or manufacturing window—questions follow:
- Was your unit actually included in the recall?
- Did the defect or hazard described in the notice exist in your product?
- Does your medical record match the type of harm the recall warns about?
- Did anything else contribute (installation, replacement parts, wear-and-tear, or alternate causes)?
An attorney’s job is to turn those questions into a clear, evidence-backed claim.


