For many local clients, the first connection is emotional and immediate—“Why me?”—but the second step is practical: matching time, place, and product use to medical findings.
Common Birmingham-area stories include:
- Homeowners and seasonal property care: repeated weed control on driveways, borders, or lawns over multiple summers.
- Landscaping and grounds teams: exposure during mixing, application, cleanup, or mowing after treatment.
- Secondhand exposure: residue carried on work clothes, tools, or shared equipment.
- Neighborhood spraying and overspray: herbicide applied nearby with wind drift affecting treated areas.
The legal question isn’t only “was there glyphosate?” It’s whether the exposure is supported in a way that can be explained to a court and tied to your diagnosis through reliable medical evidence.


