A recall is a safety action—often a signal that a manufacturer believes a product may pose an unreasonable risk. But a recall does not automatically mean:
- you’ll receive money without proving the defect
- the recall applies to your exact model/lot/batch
- the recall defect caused your injury
In practice, New Bern cases often turn on details that people overlook early: the exact identifier on the unit, when the problem began, and how the product was being used at the time of the incident. If you can’t connect those dots, insurers may argue the recall is unrelated.


