When people contact us after an exposure, the biggest problem isn’t that they “didn’t do anything.” It’s that the key materials are scattered across seasons, boxes, and devices.
Before you meet with counsel, gather what you can from the first 48–72 hours:
- Medical records: diagnosis letters, pathology/imaging reports, treatment summaries, and any doctor notes connecting symptoms to chemical exposure.
- Exposure proof: photos of product labels (even if you no longer have the bottle), invoices from lawn care/landscapers, and notes about when and where application occurred.
- Household and property details: whether the exposure happened at your residence, rental property, or a workplace near Clarksburg where equipment was stored or maintained.
- A simple timeline: approximate dates of application and the start of symptoms (even if your dates are rough).
If you used multiple products over time, that’s not automatically fatal to a claim. But it makes early organization more important—especially when insurers later argue you can’t identify what caused the illness.


