Many recalled-product injuries don’t feel dramatic at first. You might notice overheating, sudden malfunction, smoke/odor, a loose component, or a failure during normal use. Then you later see a recall notice—online, through a retailer, or from a safety alert—and realize you may have been exposed to the same hazard.
Your first job is to build a clear timeline:
- Date of incident (when the product failed or you first noticed symptoms)
- When you sought care (urgent care, ER, specialists)
- When you learned about the recall
- What happened to the product afterward (kept, discarded, repaired, returned)
That timeline matters in East Orange because evidence is often lost quickly—especially when households move items out of sight, replace parts, or stop saving packaging after delivery.


