In Flower Mound and surrounding areas, herbicide exposure can show up in ways many people don’t immediately recognize as “case-relevant.” For example:
- Residential lawn care: mowing or trimming after treatment, handling treated weeds, or working in yards where sprays were applied days or weeks earlier.
- HOA and community maintenance: exposure near shared landscaping, trails, and common areas where residents may not know exactly what was applied.
- Landscaping and property services: applying weed control at homes or commercial properties, sometimes without consistent protective equipment.
- Secondhand contact: residue on work clothing, gloves, boots, tools, or vehicles that gets carried into a home.
- Seasonal routines: repeated use during spring and fall, when applications often occur more frequently.
When your diagnosis arrives, the most urgent question becomes: was the exposure real, and is there a credible connection to your illness? Your attorney’s job is to help you answer that with documentation—not guesswork.


