Many Illinois herbicide cases don’t start with a single “spray event.” Instead, exposure often shows up as a pattern—weekend yard work, repeated landscaping treatments, or time spent near properties where weed control is scheduled.
In Manhattan, common real-world scenarios include:
- Landscaping and grounds work for property managers, commercial sites, or school/municipal maintenance contracts
- Routine residential use of weed killers (mixing, application, cleanup, and storage)
- Secondhand exposure from work boots, gloves, clothing, or equipment brought home
- Nearby application—when properties adjacent to a home or workplace are treated and residue or drift reaches walkways, garages, or outdoor living areas
Because these cases can involve multiple plausible exposure routes, strong documentation matters early—before product containers are discarded and memories become harder to pin down.


