Most people contact a Roundup lawyer after a diagnosis and a realization that the timing of their exposure and their health changes overlap. In practical terms, your case usually turns on four things:
- Where exposure likely happened (home property, a neighbor’s treated yard, a workplace landscaping route, or shared outdoor areas)
- What products were used (glyphosate-containing formulations, application method, and whether concentrate was handled)
- How exposure occurred (spraying, mowing treated vegetation, carrying residue on clothing, or indirect contact)
- How medical records describe the illness and whether physicians link it to the exposure theory in a medically credible way
A careful review early on matters because Rutherford residents may remember the “what” but not always the “exact when,” “exact product,” or “exact method.” Your attorney helps close those gaps by building an evidence timeline.


