Many injured people assume the recall automatically proves their case. In practice, the recall is usually one important piece of evidence, not a complete case on its own.
In Hackettstown, it’s common for injuries to occur in everyday settings—homes, garages, vehicles, and workplaces—where documentation is easy to lose. If you don’t preserve identifying details early (model numbers, lot codes, purchase info, photos of damage), later disputes can become about basic facts: what product you had, when you used it, and what caused the harm.
A local attorney approach focuses on building a paper trail that holds up to NJ insurance defenses:
- Confirming your product matches the recall scope
- Documenting the injury through medical records and objective findings
- Connecting the defect described in the recall to what happened in your incident
- Preparing for the most common arguments (misuse, alternative causes, or product condition changes)


