After an incident—whether it happened at a job site, during an apartment service visit, or following a spill—injured people frequently hear quick reassurances. But in many chemical cases, the first hours are when the record is most at risk.
In practice, this can mean:
- incident reports get rewritten or summarized,
- safety logs are “not available,”
- products are discarded,
- and medical notes don’t clearly connect symptoms to the exposure.
Delaware courts expect proof. That’s why early legal guidance can help you steer the process—without you having to become a toxicology investigator overnight.


