Instead of trying to “solve the whole case” at once, start by building a clean foundation that an attorney can evaluate quickly.
- Schedule (or update) medical care for the condition you’re concerned about. Ask your provider to document relevant history, including suspected exposure.
- Preserve exposure proof while it’s still available:
- receipts, emails, or bank records tied to purchases
- photos of product labels, sprayer instructions, or storage locations
- notes about when and where spraying occurred (driveway, lawn, vacant lots near a property, etc.)
- Create a simple exposure-to-diagnosis timeline (even if it’s rough):
- first likely exposure window
- first symptoms
- dates of key tests and diagnoses
- Secure employment and routine documentation (if exposure may have involved work):
- job descriptions, payroll records, or supervisor statements
- any safety training materials you still have
The goal in Butler isn’t just to “collect everything”—it’s to collect what will help connect exposure, medical findings, and responsibility.


