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Toxic Exposure Updated Regularly

Toxic Chemicals Have Been Linked to Cancer — You May Be Able to Take Legal Action

Exposure to harmful chemicals — in drinking water, herbicides, firefighting foam, medications, and consumer products — has been linked to cancer and other serious health conditions. When companies and government agencies fail to warn the public, they can be held responsible. Browse every active toxic exposure case below.

All cases sourced from court filings & government health studies
Free to check — No fee unless you recover money
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Open Lawsuits

These toxic exposure cases are still actively accepting claims.

Open
Toxic Exposure· Open Lawsuit
Paraquat Herbicide & Parkinson’s Disease Lawsuit

Farmers, agricultural workers, and others regularly exposed to paraquat — a widely used herbicide — have alleged that prolonged exposure caused them to develop Parkinson’s disease. Paraquat is banned in more than 30 countries but still permitted in the United States.

Source: Court filings in paraquat MDL proceedings (S.D. Ill.); EPA paraquat registration review documents; peer-reviewed epidemiological studies cited in litigation.
Cases Open Check eligibility
Open
Toxic Exposure· Open Lawsuit
AFFF Firefighting Foam & Cancer Lawsuit

Aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) used by military and civilian firefighters contains PFAS chemicals linked to several types of cancer. Firefighters and military personnel who used AFFF at training facilities and airports have filed lawsuits alleging they developed cancer as a result.

Source: MDL court filings, In re: Aqueous Film-Forming Foams Products Liability Litigation (D.S.C.); ATSDR PFAS health studies.
Cases Open Check eligibility
Open
Toxic Exposure· Open Lawsuit
Camp Lejeune Water Contamination Lawsuit

From 1953 to 1987, Marines, their families, and civilian workers at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina drank water contaminated with industrial solvents and other toxic chemicals. Exposure has been linked to multiple cancers and serious illnesses. The PACT Act opened a pathway for claims.

Source: Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) Camp Lejeune health studies; PACT Act of 2022 (P.L. 117-168); federal court filings.
Cases Open Check eligibility
Open
Toxic Exposure· Open Lawsuit
Talcum Powder & Ovarian Cancer Lawsuit

Women who used Johnson’s Baby Powder and other talc-based products over many years have filed lawsuits alleging that the talcum powder caused ovarian cancer or mesothelioma. Johnson & Johnson faces ongoing litigation over these claims.

Source: MDL court filings; Johnson & Johnson bankruptcy proceedings (D.N.J.); IARC classification materials.
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Settlements & Paid Funds

These cases have resulted in settlement funds. Some are still processing payments; others have paid out.

$10.9B+
Settlement· Ongoing — individual claims
Roundup Weed Killer & Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Settlement

Bayer has paid more than $10.9 billion to resolve Roundup cancer cases to date. A proposed new $7.25 billion deal would cover existing and future non-Hodgkin lymphoma cases for 21 years. Individual claims are still being filed and accepted. Important opt-out deadline: June 4, 2026.

Source: Bayer AG investor communications 2024–2026; MDL court records.
Claims Open Check eligibility
$12.5B
Settlement· 2023 Settlement
PFAS “Forever Chemical” Water Contamination Settlement

3M agreed to pay up to $12.5 billion and DuPont agreed to pay $1.185 billion to resolve claims from water utilities contaminated by PFAS “forever chemicals.” Individual exposure claims for people diagnosed with cancer or other PFAS-linked conditions are also being filed.

Source: 3M settlement agreement, In re: Aqueous Film-Forming Foams Products Liability Litigation (D.S.C. 2023); DuPont public settlement communications.
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Open
Toxic Exposure· Open Lawsuit
Zantac (Ranitidine) & Cancer Lawsuit

The FDA pulled Zantac from the market in 2020 after discovering that ranitidine, the active ingredient, could degrade into NDMA — a probable human carcinogen. People who took Zantac long-term and later developed cancer have filed lawsuits.

Source: FDA MedWatch Safety Alert, April 2020; In re: Zantac (Ranitidine) Products Liability Litigation, MDL 2924 (S.D. Fla.); court filings.
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