In practice, the most common sticking points in talc cases aren’t “headline” questions—they’re documentation and timeline questions.
For people in Airmont, the evidence usually looks like:
- Product identification: brand name, packaging photos, or a retailer/market where it was purchased (even if the container is no longer available)
- Exposure timeline: approximate years of use, frequency, and whether it was used for infant care or adult personal care
- Medical proof: pathology reports, imaging, treatment plans, and physician notes that connect the diagnosis to the exposure history
- Labeling and warnings: what the product claimed and what warnings were (or weren’t) provided when it was sold
Because many households in the area keep items for years—or don’t save old receipts—your lawyer may need to reconstruct the story using household records, pharmacy or store history, and the medical record itself.


