Many weed killer exposure cases in and around New Britain don’t start with a preserved product label or purchase receipt. Instead, they begin with a common pattern:
- A home or rental property was treated for weeds during spring/summer maintenance.
- A landscaper or maintenance worker applied herbicides as part of routine upkeep.
- Dust, overspray, or residue exposure happened near driveways, sidewalks, or shared grounds.
- Medical symptoms developed later—sometimes after a diagnosis, sometimes after progressive testing.
When the timeline is fuzzy, the legal work becomes about reconstruction: matching when and where exposure likely occurred to what doctors documented.


