In product cases, the strongest evidence usually comes from details people can overlook when they’re busy—like the exact brand, approximate purchase dates, and the labels or packaging that were used at the time.
In Richmond, that can look like:
- Household product use over years (baby powder, body powders, or grooming products used routinely at home)
- Multiple caregivers or product sources (items bought at different stores, swapped between households, or replaced without keeping packaging)
- Documentation gaps common to busy families (lost receipts, discarded containers, or missing photos)
Even if you no longer have the original container, a lawyer can help identify what information still matters—such as where you bought the product, how long it was used, and how the diagnosis connects to exposure history.


