Many Roundup-related cases in New Jersey don’t start with “I used a weed killer once.” They start with a pattern—repeated contact over time—often connected to how properties are maintained and how people share spaces.
In and around Plainfield, these situations often come up:
- Residential lawn and garden use: Mixing concentrates, applying sprays, or mowing treated areas without clear documentation of timing.
- Landscaping and grounds work: Herbicide application for property owners, HOAs, or commercial sites in the Plainfield area.
- Secondhand exposure at home: Work clothes, gloves, boots, and tools carried indoors or stored near living areas.
- Shared outdoor environments: Exposure occurring where multiple households or staff use the same maintained grounds.
- Delayed realization after diagnosis: People often connect symptoms to past yard work only after a doctor identifies cancer or another serious condition.
A practical legal review focuses on how exposure happened, when it happened, and what medical records show—not just what a person suspects.


