In a smaller community like Artesia, it’s common for people to rely on limited documentation they can’t easily replace—receipts from older purchases, product labels that were thrown away, or work schedules that become harder to reconstruct. When a recall is discovered after you’ve been injured, delays can create proof problems.
Also, because Artesia residents often juggle work at industrial sites and long commutes, injuries may be treated under time pressure. That can lead to gaps in medical records—gaps insurance companies may later use to argue the injury wasn’t serious, didn’t start when you said it did, or wasn’t caused by the recalled defect.
Getting counsel involved early can help you:
- preserve product identifiers (model/serial/lot codes)
- document an injury timeline that matches New Mexico’s evidence expectations
- avoid giving recorded or written statements that don’t fully reflect what happened


