Many people first learn about Camp Lejeune-related risks while living their day-to-day life—commuting to work, managing kids’ schedules, and handling appointments in between.
In a place like Brooklyn, that can mean:
- coordinating medical visits while trying to gather service/residency proof,
- dealing with insurance paperwork while symptoms evolve,
- and answering requests from claim handlers without knowing what language could later be disputed.
A lawyer’s job is to reduce the “search and scramble” phase and replace it with a clear, evidence-based plan.


