Many Camp Lejeune-related cases hinge on documentation: where someone lived or served, when they were exposed, and how medical conditions developed over time. For people in New Ulm, common hurdles include:
- Medical care across multiple providers (local clinics, specialists, and follow-up appointments in different systems)
- Paperwork that’s hard to reconstruct years later (housing/assignment information, old contact details, provider notes)
- Long timelines between initial symptoms and a diagnosis that feels “official”
Minnesota claimants often discover that even when they have legitimate medical concerns, a case can stall if the evidence is not organized in a way that clearly supports exposure and causation.


