In Moore, many exposure stories begin in predictable places: driveways and backyards, rental/HOA-managed properties, landscaping crews, and maintenance work for schools, churches, and commercial lots nearby. Because exposure can be hard to “prove” years later, your first priority is organizing evidence in a way that attorneys and experts can review quickly.
Start with this practical list:
- Medical records tied to your diagnosis: imaging reports, pathology (if any), doctor notes, and treatment summaries
- Exposure timeline: approximate dates/years, where you used (or were near) herbicides, and who applied them
- Product proof: photos of labels, receipts, old bottles/cans (if you still have them), or notes about the brand/product name
- Work and property context: job duties, landscaping schedules, and whether applications happened on your property, neighbor’s property, or job sites
Even if you don’t have the exact container anymore, you can still build momentum—Moore cases often rely on a combination of label identification, credible testimony, and records showing how the product was used.


