Residents typically contact a Roundup lawyer after they connect the dots between their diagnosis and real-world exposure patterns. In Fullerton, those patterns often look like:
- Residential and HOA landscaping: Repeated weed control where herbicide is applied close to walking paths, driveways, and patios.
- Apartment and commercial property maintenance: Routine spraying schedules that aren’t always communicated clearly to tenants or visitors.
- Worksite exposure in outdoor roles: Landscapers, groundskeepers, warehouse and facility staff supporting outdoor maintenance, and others who may handle treated areas.
- Secondhand exposure: Residue carried on clothing, gloves, boots, or tools after yard work or job duties.
- School and community grounds: Exposure concerns arise when families notice symptoms after repeated time spent near treated areas.
The key point: “There was weed killer in the area” isn’t enough by itself. What matters is whether the product was used in a way that could realistically create exposure for the person who became ill.


