In a community like Miramar, people frequently balance responsibilities—commuting, school schedules, and healthcare appointments—while trying to reconstruct events from years or decades ago. That’s a common problem in Camp Lejeune cases: the medical story may exist, but the “paper trail” tying symptoms to a specific exposure period can be scattered.
A lawyer’s job is to reduce that burden by:
- identifying which documents tend to carry the most weight,
- building a timeline that matches the medical record,
- and handling the procedural steps so you don’t miss key deadlines.


