Many people contact an attorney after a diagnosis, but the exposure story often starts much earlier:
- Homeowners and renters who used weed killer for driveways, fence lines, or yards
- Landscaping and maintenance workers who applied herbicides as part of routine grounds work
- Residents near regularly treated areas (common around multi-unit properties, retention areas, and commercial frontage)
- People who noticed symptoms later and realized the timing lines up with earlier use of herbicide products
In practical terms, East Point claims often turn on whether you can document where exposure happened (home, work, or nearby property) and how it likely occurred—especially when product labels or application details are no longer easy to find.


