When exposure happened months or years ago, the biggest challenge isn’t usually proving you were sick—it’s proving a consistent exposure story.
For Newton residents, that “exposure story” often involves:
- treating residential yards and driveways during peak growing seasons
- nearby application where you live, work, or care for family
- landscaping or maintenance work connected to herbicide use
- secondary exposure (for example, residue brought home on work clothes)
A fast start looks like building a one-page timeline you can share in a consultation:
- Dates or windows of exposure (even approximate)
- Where exposure occurred (home, rental, workplace, neighborhood)
- Who applied or handled the product
- What was used (brand, label photos, any remaining packaging)
- When symptoms began and how diagnosis developed
If you’re thinking, “I have too many documents and not enough clarity,” that’s common. A structured approach can reduce back-and-forth and help your attorney focus on the evidence that most affects case value.


