In Derby, exposure can come from places people don’t always think to track—backyard applications, shared property edges, rental turnovers, or work duties connected to groundskeeping and maintenance. Product containers may be tossed, purchase receipts may be missing, and application timing may become fuzzy.
Because the timeline is frequently the weak link, our approach starts by rebuilding a usable exposure story:
- When weed control likely occurred (season, frequency, and approximate dates)
- Where it happened (home/property, nearby application areas, job sites)
- How exposure likely occurred (direct use, incidental contact, take-home residue)
- Which product may have been used (labels, photos, brand details, or comparable products)
This matters because Connecticut injury claims still depend on evidence that can be explained clearly to insurers and—if necessary—presented to a court.


