In a community like Keizer, many recalled-product injuries don’t look dramatic at first. A product may be used in everyday ways—at a residence, a school or office setting, or during commuting routines—and the injury may show up later as complications or worsening symptoms.
That timing matters. Oregon insurers and defense teams frequently argue that:
- the product wasn’t actually part of the recall scope,
- the injury came from something else (pre-existing conditions, later exposures, installation or maintenance issues), or
- the injury wasn’t caused by the defect described in the recall.
We focus on getting the facts straight early—so you’re not left trying to prove causation after memories fade and product conditions change.


