Many claims begin with a familiar Henderson scenario—someone who:
- sprays or treats weeds on residential property during peak growing seasons,
- works around landscaping, grounds maintenance, or agricultural land,
- handles equipment or clothing that may carry herbicide residue,
- lives near areas where vegetation is treated and the timeline doesn’t seem to add up.
In other cases, the trigger is medical: a diagnosis that leads to questions about prior chemical exposure, including whether the illness could be connected to glyphosate.
Because memories, product names, and dates can fade quickly, local residents often reach out after they’ve already started digging through paperwork—receipts, labels, employment history, and medical records.


