In the St. Louis area, many people first connect the dots only after they:
- see a recall notice online,
- hear about incidents involving similar models,
- or realize the product they already disposed of was included in the affected batch.
By that time, the product may be gone, receipts may be missing, and medical symptoms may have changed or spread. For Jennings residents, that timeline mismatch is a common reason claims slow down—because defendants argue the injury wasn’t linked to the recall hazard.
A recall can support your case, but you still need evidence showing:
- your product matches the recall scope,
- the defect or hazard existed when you were hurt,
- the defect caused (or contributed to) your injuries.


