A recall is a public safety action. It does not automatically mean you will receive money. What it can do is support your legal theory that the manufacturer knew (or should have known) about a hazard tied to your product.
In Odessa cases, we often see delays for practical reasons:
- People keep using the item while waiting on repairs or replacement parts.
- Medical treatment happens first, and recall details come later.
- Product identifiers (serial numbers/lot codes) get lost during cleaning, relocation, or storage.
Those delays can affect how insurance companies argue about causation—meaning they may claim your injuries weren’t caused by the recall-related defect. Your job isn’t to win the argument. Your job is to document what happened while it’s still provable.


