Many talc exposure claim problems start the same way: the product use happened years ago, brands changed, and family members may remember different details. In a community where people often shop across multiple retailers and may keep household items through moves or seasonal storage, it’s common for packaging to be missing.
That’s why the first goal is building a defensible timeline from what you can still document:
- approximate years and frequency of use
- the types of products used (body powder, hygiene powder, baby-related products, etc.)
- where products were purchased or stored (including whether they were replaced during household transitions)
- diagnosis date, key medical findings, and treatment milestones
In Michigan, deadlines and procedural steps can matter as a case moves forward. A lawyer’s job is to turn your history into a structured set of facts that can survive insurance scrutiny and discovery requests.


