In suburban communities like Gahanna, it’s common for injuries to happen in settings that don’t feel like “legal events” at first—like:
- Home repairs and appliance use (burns, smoke damage, malfunctioning heating/cooking products)
- Commutes and transportation (recall-related failures involving vehicles or mobility devices)
- Family use of consumer products (child seats, wearables, household electronics)
- Workplace-related incidents (injuries occurring in environments tied to distributors, installers, or maintenance)
The practical challenge is that evidence can disappear quickly: products get thrown out, replaced, or serviced; receipts are lost; and people’s recollections fade. When the recall arrives later, the gap between the injury date and the recall discovery can create disputes over what caused the harm.


