Many Camp Lejeune cases hinge on timing: when exposure occurred, when symptoms started, and how doctors documented the progression. For people in Asheville, that often means working around real-life constraints—travel between care providers, records stored across multiple systems, and family members who may need to coordinate documents.
A lawyer’s job is to turn scattered information into a coherent record. That typically includes:
- identifying the period you were at Camp Lejeune (service, employment, or lawful residence)
- assembling medical records and key test results
- organizing a symptom timeline that matches the way clinicians described your condition
When your evidence is organized, it’s easier to respond to questions from the government or opposing parties and to avoid preventable gaps.


