Many Rolesville cases start with a familiar pattern:
- Backyard and driveway weed control where products were mixed, sprayed, or reapplied seasonally.
- Residences near treated land—including property edges, wooded areas, and nearby managed lots—where overspray or drift may have reached lawns and gardens.
- Secondhand exposure from contaminated work clothing, tools, gloves, or lawn equipment brought inside after yard work.
- Community and contractor involvement, such as landscapers or maintenance crews applying herbicides and residents unknowingly being exposed during or after treatment.
Even when the exposure seems “ordinary,” the legal question is whether the product was used or present in a way that can be linked—through medical evidence—to the illness being claimed.


