Most weed killer cases rise or fall on whether the evidence can be assembled into a coherent narrative that a decision-maker can follow. That narrative usually has two tracks:
- How exposure likely happened (product type, where it was used, who applied it, and when)
- How your health changed (diagnosis dates, pathology/imaging results, treatment history, and physician notes)
An attorney’s job is to connect those tracks with documentation—without you having to guess what matters. And in Mount Pleasant, that often means pulling together records that residents may not think to save (like photos from yard work, HOA/landscaping schedules, or employer safety documentation).


