Questions often begin after a cancer diagnosis, a serious non-cancer condition, or persistent symptoms that don’t match earlier expectations. In Raymore, people frequently trace exposure to:
- Home lawn and garden treatment (spraying weeds, edging, or mowing/handling areas shortly after treatment)
- Landscaping or grounds maintenance (including crews that apply herbicides on residential properties nearby)
- Work environments tied to outdoor vegetation (groundskeeping, maintenance, or ag-related work in the broader area)
- Secondhand contact, such as residue on work clothing brought home or equipment shared among household members
A lawyer’s job here isn’t to “prove” your case with guesswork—it’s to help you document the most defensible chain between exposure, medical findings, and legal responsibility.


