In New Ulm and across Minnesota, the strongest claims are usually the ones with a clear record of when and how exposure happened. That’s because illness investigations aren’t based on suspicion alone—they’re based on proof that can be reviewed by medical professionals and evaluated under Minnesota law.
A lawyer will typically help you compile:
- Product details (brand name, approximate purchase dates, labels/photos if you still have them)
- Where exposure occurred (yard, farm/acreage, workplace grounds, nearby treated areas)
- How exposure occurred (mixing, spraying, cleanup, mowing treated vegetation, residue on clothing)
- Who was present (co-workers, family members, neighbors who can describe the application conditions)
- When symptoms began and how they progressed
Even if you can’t remember everything perfectly, organizing what you do know early matters—before containers are discarded, old work orders are gone, or memories blur.


