Start with safety and documentation—especially because proof can disappear quickly.
- Get medical care immediately for any injury or symptoms, even if you think it’s minor.
- Preserve the product and identifiers: model/serial numbers, lot codes, photos of the damage, packaging, and any receipts.
- Save the recall notice (paper or online). Screenshot the page and record the date you found it.
- Write a short incident timeline while it’s fresh: when you used the product, what you were doing, what happened, and when symptoms began.
In Hammonton, we often see injuries tied to everyday household items and consumer goods used in homes and shared spaces. Those cases rely heavily on accurate product identification and a consistent timeline—because insurers will look for reasons the injury could be explained without the defect.


