Many toxic exposure claims stall because the early story stays vague—no dates, no product names, no photos, no incident reports, and no medical baseline. We start by building a clean timeline that an attorney can use to identify the likely exposure pathway.
In practical terms, your case strategy often depends on whether you can show:
- What substance was involved (chemical, cleaning agent, smoke/fumes, mold-related materials, dust from construction, etc.)
- Where and when the exposure occurred (a workplace shift, a rental unit stay, a maintenance event, a renovation zone, or an event area)
- How symptoms began and progressed
- Whether reasonable safety steps were taken (and if not, who had the duty to do so)
AI can help your legal team sort and cross-check large sets of records faster—but it’s the attorney’s job to confirm reliability and connect the evidence to South Carolina legal standards.


