In a smaller community, it’s common for people to cross paths with the same types of environments over and over—neighborhood properties, local employers, and recurring seasonal work. That can make it easier to reconstruct where exposure may have happened, but it also creates a risk: details can blur when you’re trying to remember years of yard work or multiple job sites.
A Morton-focused legal review typically starts by building a clear “who/what/where/when” record, such as:
- Home exposure: mowing treated areas, applying weed killer, or cleaning up residue from tools
- Work exposure: groundskeeping, landscaping, facility maintenance, or agricultural-related duties
- Community exposure: maintaining property adjacent to treated fields or regularly serviced common areas
- Household exposure: residue carried on clothing or work gear
When you’re preparing a glyphosate lawsuit, the strongest cases are usually the ones with a credible, consistent exposure story supported by documents and records—not guesswork.


