In suburban communities like Tenafly, it’s common for the injured person to learn about a recall through:
- a mailed notice,
- a warning posted online,
- or a sudden conversation about “that same model” after an incident.
The issue is timing. Even if the recall is public, your evidence can still disappear—the product gets repaired, replaced, stored in a basement, or discarded; receipts get lost; and the details of what happened become blurry. New Jersey injury claims also face strict deadlines, so waiting can reduce your options.
A local lawyer’s job is to move efficiently: preserve proof, confirm whether your product matches the recall, and document how the defect caused harm.


