In the Liberty County area, exposure concerns frequently arise after one of these situations:
- Residential landscaping and lawn services: Homeowners may hire routine weed control for yards and fence lines, then later discover they or a loved one developed a serious diagnosis.
- Workplace or jobsite contact: People employed in groundskeeping, landscaping, warehouses, and facility maintenance may handle herbicides directly—or be near treated areas shortly after application.
- Secondhand exposure in everyday life: Some families first realize something is off when residue appears to follow a worker home (on work boots, clothing, tools, or vehicles).
- Community property maintenance: Treated common areas (parks, sidewalks, HOA-managed spaces, or large commercial lots) can lead to lingering concerns when symptoms persist.
What matters legally is not just that a product was “somewhere nearby,” but whether the exposure can be supported and tied to the illness through records and testimony.


