A recall is meant to reduce risk, not to compensate every injured person automatically. After an incident, questions quickly become legal ones:
- Was your specific unit included in the recall (model, lot/batch, date range)?
- Was the defect/warning problem the cause of your injury?
- Who should be held responsible under North Carolina law based on the product’s design, manufacturing, or warnings?
- What damages apply to your situation—medical bills, lost wages, and long-term effects?
In practice, insurers and defense teams often focus on gaps: missing identifiers, inconsistent timelines, or arguments that the injury came from something else (wear and tear, improper installation, or misuse).
A lawyer’s job is to connect the recall information to what happened to you—using records, documentation, and a clear liability theory.


