Many people contact a Roundup injury attorney after noticing a pattern:
- They used weed control products repeatedly for years in a yard, pasture edge, driveway area, or around outbuildings.
- They worked with or around vegetation treated with herbicides—sometimes without knowing which chemical was used.
- Family members helped apply weed killer or handled treated items, then later developed serious illness.
- A hired landscaping or maintenance crew applied herbicides, and residue may have remained on boots, tools, hoses, or work clothing.
In Dumas, that “real-life exposure” often includes routine property care and agricultural-adjacent work. The legal question becomes: what was applied, where, how often, and how it connects to medical findings.


