A recall is designed to reduce public risk, but it doesn’t function like an automatic admission of liability for every injury. In practice, your claim usually depends on questions like:
- Whether your specific item was included in the recall (model/serial/lot matters)
- Whether the recall’s safety issue is consistent with how you were hurt
- Whether the injury records support a clear connection between the defect and your medical outcome
In Lansdowne, that matters because injured people often discover recall information after the fact—sometimes while sorting through packaging for returns, searching online from a phone, or asking a landlord/property manager questions after an incident.


