A recall is a serious public-safety signal, but it’s not the same thing as a completed claim. Insurance companies and manufacturers may argue:
- the recalled product wasn’t actually the one you used,
- your injury didn’t come from the defect described in the recall,
- you used it in a way the manufacturer didn’t anticipate,
- or a different cause explains what happened.
In Woodstock, where many residents commute to the surrounding corridor for work and activities, delays in documentation and follow-up can be common. That can make it harder to connect the incident to the recall scope—especially if the product gets repaired, stored, or tossed.
The goal is to build a claim around what failed, how you were hurt, and why the recall is relevant to your exact situation.


