Portsmouth residents contact attorneys after exposure patterns that often look like this:
- Residential lawn treatment: Yard care using weed killers on driveways, fences, and landscaped areas—sometimes repeatedly over multiple seasons.
- Secondhand exposure during outdoor work: Spouses, family members, or roommates exposed to herbicide residue brought indoors on work clothes, gloves, or tools.
- Outdoor service roles: People working in landscaping, groundskeeping, or facility maintenance where herbicides are applied on schedules.
- After-application contact: Mixing, mowing, or handling vegetation soon after spraying—leading to contact with residue even when the person wasn’t the one applying the product.
- Industrial and port-adjacent facilities: In areas where grounds and perimeter vegetation are maintained, herbicide use can be part of routine site upkeep.
A key point: a diagnosis alone doesn’t automatically prove legal causation. What matters is whether the product exposure can be tied to the illness using records, timelines, and credible medical support.


