Rowlett Hazing Injury Lawyer | Attorney911 for Fraternity & Sorority Abuse Lawsuits
For Rowlett Families: When Greek Life Turns Dangerous
Imagine receiving a phone call at 2 AM. Your child, a freshman at a Texas university just hours from home in Rowlett, is slurring their words. Between sobs, they describe being forced to drink an entire bottle of liquor in a fraternity basement. They’re scared, disoriented, and begging you not to tell anyone because “the brothers said we’d all get kicked out.” Or perhaps the call is from a hospital—your child has been admitted with acute kidney failure after extreme physical hazing, their urine is brown, and doctors are talking about permanent damage. This nightmare is real for Texas families, and right now, we’re fighting one of the most severe cases in our state’s history.
At Attorney911, we serve families in Rowlett, Garland, Rockwall, and across Dallas County who are facing the aftermath of fraternity, sorority, Corps, or athletic team hazing. We are Texas hazing litigation specialists with a data-driven approach and current, high-stakes experience. As we write this in late 2025, our firm is actively litigating a $10 million hazing and abuse lawsuit against the University of Houston, the Pi Kappa Phi national fraternity, and 13 individual members on behalf of Leonel Bermudez—a case that shows exactly how quickly “tradition” can become catastrophic injury.
This guide is written specifically for Rowlett parents and students. We’ll explain what modern hazing really looks like, break down Texas law and liability, examine the Greek ecosystems at universities where Rowlett families send their children, and show how our unique investigative approach builds powerful cases for accountability. If you’re reading this during a crisis, know this: you are not alone, and there is a path forward.
IMMEDIATE HELP FOR HAZING EMERGENCIES IN ROWLETT:
- If your child is in danger RIGHT NOW:
- Call 911 for medical emergencies
- Then call Attorney911: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
- We provide immediate help—that’s why we’re the Legal Emergency Lawyers™
- In the first 48 hours:
- Get medical attention immediately, even if the student insists they are “fine”
- Preserve evidence BEFORE it’s deleted:
- Screenshot group chats, texts, DMs immediately
- Photograph injuries from multiple angles
- Save physical items (clothing, receipts, objects)
- Write down everything while memory is fresh (who, what, when, where)
- Do NOT:
- Confront the fraternity/sorority
- Sign anything from the university or insurance company
- Post details on public social media
- Let your child delete messages or “clean up” evidence
- Contact an experienced hazing attorney within 24–48 hours:
- Evidence disappears fast (deleted group chats, destroyed evidence, coached witnesses)
- Universities move quickly to control the narrative
- We can help preserve evidence and protect your child’s rights
- Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for an immediate, confidential consultation
Hazing in 2025: What It Really Looks Like on Texas Campuses
For parents in Rowlett whose college experiences may have been decades ago, today’s hazing often bears little resemblance to harmless pranks. It is systematized, digitally monitored, and frequently disguised as “team building” or “tradition.” Hazing is any intentional, knowing, or reckless act—on or off campus—directed against a student for the purpose of joining or maintaining membership in a group, that endangers mental or physical health or safety. Under Texas law, a victim’s “consent” is not a defense.
Modern Hazing Methods: From Digital Coercion to Extreme Violence
Alcohol & Substance Hazing: The most common and deadly form. This includes forced consumption during “Big/Little” nights, “family tree” drinking games, lineups, and bid acceptance parties. The goal is often rapid intoxication to the point of incapacity or alcohol poisoning.
Physical Hazing: This ranges from prolonged, exhaustive calisthenics (“smokings”) to outright beatings with paddles or fists. In our current University of Houston Pi Kappa Phi case, the victim was forced through 100+ push-ups and 500 squats in a single session, leading to rhabdomyolysis (severe muscle breakdown) and acute kidney failure. Physical hazing also includes sleep deprivation, food/water restriction, and exposure to extreme elements.
Psychological & Humiliating Hazing: Designed to break down identity and instill obedience. This includes verbal abuse, forced nudity, degrading costumes or roles, “roasts,” social isolation, and being forced to perform embarrassing acts in public or on social media.
Digital Hazing: A 21st-century evolution. Pledges are often required to maintain 24/7 availability on group chats (GroupMe, WhatsApp), respond instantly to demands, share real-time location data, and participate in humiliating online “challenges.” This creates constant psychological pressure and a documented trail of coercion.
Sexualized Hazing: Some of the most traumatic abuse involves forced simulated sexual acts, inappropriate touching, or sexually degrading rituals. When hazing involves sexual harassment or assault, it triggers additional federal Title IX protections and liabilities.
Where Hazing Happens: Beyond the Stereotype
While fraternities and sororities are frequently implicated, hazing is an institutional problem across campus life:
- Fraternities & Sororities (IFC, Panhellenic, NPHC, Multicultural councils)
- Corps of Cadets / ROTC / Military-Style Groups (with deep tradition at Texas A&M)
- Athletic Teams (from football to cheerleading)
- Spirit & Tradition Organizations (like the Texas Cowboys at UT)
- Marching Bands & Performance Groups
- Some Academic, Service, or Cultural Clubs
The common thread is a power imbalance between new and existing members, wrapped in the justification of “tradition,” “bonding,” or “proving commitment.”
Texas Hazing Law & Liability: What Rowlett Families Need to Know
Texas has specific statutes governing hazing, primarily under Chapter 37, Subchapter F of the Education Code. Understanding this framework is crucial for Rowlett families considering their options.
Texas Hazing Law (Education Code Chapter 37)
Definition (§37.151): Hazing means any intentional, knowing, or reckless act, on or off campus, by one person alone or with others, directed against a student, that endangers the mental or physical health or safety of a student for the purpose of pledging, initiation, affiliation, holding office, or maintaining membership in any organization whose members include students.
Key Points for Rowlett Families:
- Location Doesn’t Matter: Hazing at an off-campus house, Airbnb, or remote retreat is still hazing under Texas law.
- “Consent” is Not a Defense (§37.155): Even if your child “agreed” to participate, it does not legalize the activity. Courts recognize the coercive power of peer pressure and the desire to belong.
- Criminal Penalties (§37.152): Hazing is a Class B misdemeanor. It becomes a Class A misdemeanor if it causes bodily injury, and a State Jail Felony if it causes serious bodily injury or death. Individuals can also be charged for failing to report hazing or retaliating against someone who reports.
- Organizational Liability (§37.153): The fraternity, sorority, or club itself can be prosecuted and fined up to $10,000. The university can revoke its recognition.
- Good-Faith Reporter Immunity (§37.154): Someone who reports hazing in good faith is immune from civil or criminal liability. Many universities also have medical amnesty policies to encourage calling 911 in alcohol emergencies.
Criminal vs. Civil Cases: Two Paths to Accountability
Criminal Cases: Brought by the state (DA’s office). Aim is punishment (jail, fines, probation). Charges can include hazing, furnishing alcohol to minors, assault, battery, or manslaughter in fatal cases. The burden of proof is “beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Civil Lawsuits: Brought by the victim or their family. Aim is compensation for damages (medical bills, pain and suffering, lost future earnings) and institutional accountability. The burden of proof is lower—“by a preponderance of the evidence.” A criminal conviction is not required to file a civil case. In fact, civil discovery can often uncover evidence that criminal investigations miss.
The Federal Overlay: Title IX, Clery, and the Stop Campus Hazing Act
- Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024): Requires colleges receiving federal aid to report hazing incidents more transparently and strengthen prevention programs. Public reporting requirements phase in by 2026.
- Title IX: When hazing involves sexual harassment or gender-based hostility, schools have a legal duty to investigate and address it under federal law.
- Clery Act: Requires universities to report certain campus crime statistics, which can include hazing-related assaults or alcohol crimes.
Who Can Be Held Liable in a Civil Hazing Lawsuit?
A comprehensive legal strategy looks at the full chain of responsibility:
- Individual Students: Those who planned, executed, or actively covered up the hazing.
- Local Chapter / Organization: The fraternity or sorority chapter as an entity, including its officers and pledge educators.
- National Fraternity/Sorority Headquarters: Often the deepest pocket. Liability hinges on what they knew or should have known about dangerous traditions, and whether they adequately supervised and enforced their own policies.
- The University: Public universities like UT Austin and Texas A&M have some sovereign immunity, but can be sued for gross negligence, Title IX violations, or deliberate indifference to known risks. Private universities like SMU and Baylor have fewer immunity protections.
- Third Parties: Property owners of off-campus houses, landlords, bars that overserved alcohol, and security companies may share liability.
Our approach at Attorney911 is to identify every potentially liable entity from the start, using our proprietary data to map the organizational landscape behind the Greek letters.
The Flagship Case: Leonel Bermudez vs. University of Houston & Pi Kappa Phi
Right now, in a Harris County court, we are litigating a case that exemplifies the severe, institutional nature of modern hazing. We represent Leonel Bermudez, a University of Houston student who suffered life-altering injuries during his Fall 2025 pledge period to the Pi Kappa Phi Beta Nu chapter.
The Hazing Conduct: According to the lawsuit and media reports, Bermudez was subjected to a regime of humiliation and abuse. This included being forced to carry a “pledge fanny pack” 24/7 containing condoms, a sex toy, and nicotine devices. He endured enforced dress codes, overnight chauffeuring duties, and hours-long “study” blocks. The physical hazing was extreme: sprints, bear crawls, wheelbarrow races, being sprayed in the face with a hose “similar to waterboarding,” lying in vomit-soaked grass, and forced consumption of milk, hot dogs, and peppercorns until vomiting.
The Breaking Point: On November 3, 2025, Bermudez was forced through a “workout” of over 100 push-ups and 500 squats under threat of expulsion. He collapsed. In the following days, his condition deteriorated until he was passing brown urine. Rushed to the hospital, he was diagnosed with rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure, requiring a four-day hospitalization. Lab tests showed critically high creatine kinase levels. He faces ongoing risk of permanent kidney damage.
The Institutional Response & Lawsuit: The Pi Kappa Phi national headquarters suspended the chapter on November 6. On November 14, chapter members voted to surrender their charter, shutting it down. The University of Houston called the conduct “deeply disturbing.” We filed a $10 million lawsuit in late 2025 against a full defendant universe: the University of Houston, the UH System Board of Regents, Pi Kappa Phi national headquarters, the Beta Nu housing corporation, and 13 individual fraternity leaders. This case is active, ongoing proof of our firm’s commitment to taking on the most serious hazing cases.
For detailed coverage, see the Click2Houston report on the UH Pi Kappa Phi hazing case and the ABC13 coverage of Leonel Bermudez’s UH hazing lawsuit.
The Dallas-Fort Worth Greek Ecosystem: What Rowlett Parents Should Know
Rowlett sits within the massive Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metropolitan area, which our data shows contains over 510 Greek-related organizations, including undergraduate chapters, alumni associations, housing corporations, and honor societies. This dense network means the fraternities and sororities present at universities across Texas have deep-rooted, legally recognized entities operating right here in North Texas.
Public Records Directory: Fraternities, Sororities & Greek Organizations Connected to Rowlett Families
As part of our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine, we maintain and investigate public records on the organizations that may share liability in hazing cases. This due diligence begins long before a lawsuit is filed. Below is a sample of the kind of data we track, showing the formal, legal structures behind Greek life that Rowlett families encounter.
Sample Texas-Registered Greek Organizations (IRS B83 Data):
- Beta Upsilon Chi, EIN 742911848, Fort Worth, TX 76244. Cause IQ also lists a Beta Upsilon Chi Fraternity and Foundation in Fort Worth.
- Texas Kappa Sigma Educational Foundation Inc, EIN 741380362, Fort Worth, TX 76147-0061. A Kappa Sigma housing foundation in the DFW metro.
- Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity – Lambda Lambda Chapter, EIN 521278573, Dallas, TX 75241-4331.
- Zeta Phi Beta Sorority Inc – Sigma Gamma Chapter, EIN 392352450, Houston, TX 77254-0026.
- Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi (University of Texas at Dallas chapter), EIN 263170920, Denton, TX 76204.
- Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, EIN 364091267, Waco, TX 76710-4154, with affiliated chapters listed in Houston and Beaumont metros.
- Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity, EIN 746064445, Nederland, TX 77627-8843, with a listed “Texas District” alumni/house corp in Houston.
Selected DFW Metro Greek Entities (Cause IQ Data):
- Delta Delta Delta (Tri Delta) – National sorority headquarters in the Dallas area.
- Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity – Tau Deuteron Chapter (associated with Baylor, Waco).
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity – Texas Rho Corp. (house corporation at UT Austin).
- Kappa Delta Sorority – Gamma Beta Chapter (at Texas Woman’s University, Denton).
This directory illustrates a critical point for litigation: national Greek brands operate through a web of local legal entities (house corporations, alumni chapters, educational foundations). When hazing occurs, identifying and pursuing these entities is key to securing accountability and insurance coverage. We don’t start from zero—we start from data.
Where Rowlett Families Send Their Kids: Campus Hazing Realities
Rowlett students attend a wide range of Texas universities, from nearby Dallas County schools to flagship campuses across the state. Hazing risks exist across this spectrum.
Major Universities Attended by Rowlett Students
1. The University of Texas at Dallas (Richardson, Dallas County): As a major public university minutes from Rowlett, UT Dallas is a common choice. Its Greek life includes IFC fraternities and Panhellenic sororities. While less historically dominant than at UT Austin, hazing incidents can and do occur in any Greek system.
2. Texas A&M University-Commerce (Commerce, Hunt County): Another regional public university within driving distance. Home to Greek life and student organizations where hazing has been documented in campus conduct records.
3. Statewide Flagship Universities: Rowlett families also send students to the largest Texas universities with the most entrenched Greek systems:
- University of Texas at Austin
- Texas A&M University (College Station)
- University of Houston
- Texas Tech University (Lubbock)
- Baylor University (Waco)
- Southern Methodist University (Dallas)
University of Texas at Austin: A Case Study in Transparency and Recurrence
UT Austin maintains a public Hazing Violations page, offering a rare window into ongoing issues. This transparency itself is a tool for families. Recent entries (2023-2024) show:
- Pi Kappa Alpha: Sanctioned for new members being directed to consume milk and perform strenuous calisthenics. Outcome: Probation and mandatory hazing-prevention education.
- Texas Wranglers (Spirit Group): Sanctioned for forced physical activity and alcohol-related hazing.
- Various other fraternities and spirit groups cited for forced workouts, alcohol misuse, and punishment-based activities.
What This Means for Rowlett Families: This public record demonstrates pattern. When an organization has a prior violation on file, it becomes much harder for the university or the national headquarters to claim they had no idea hazing was a foreseeable risk. This “prior notice” is a powerful element in building a negligence case.
Texas A&M University: Greek Life and the Corps Culture
Texas A&M presents a unique environment with both a strong Greek system and the storied Corps of Cadets. Both have faced serious hazing allegations:
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon Lawsuit (2021): Pledges alleged being doused with substances including industrial-strength cleaner, causing severe chemical burns requiring skin graft surgeries. The chapter was suspended, and a lawsuit sought $1 million.
- Corps of Cadets Lawsuit (2023): A cadet alleged degrading hazing including being bound between beds in a “roasted pig” pose with an apple in his mouth. The suit sought over $1 million, asserting the university failed to protect him.
These cases show that hazing is not monolithic—it adapts to the culture of the organization, whether it’s a social fraternity or a military-style unit.
Building a Hazing Case with Attorney911’s Data Engine & Experience
When a Rowlett family comes to us after a hazing incident, we don’t just see an isolated event. We see a pattern, a history, and a network of responsible parties. Our strategy is built on two pillars: deep investigative resources and proven litigation experience against powerful institutions.
Our Investigative Process: From Smartphones to National Headquarters
- Immediate Evidence Preservation: We guide families on how to secure digital evidence before it vanishes. This includes forensic recovery of deleted group chats (GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage), social media archives, and location data. Watch our video on using your phone to document a legal case for best practices.
- Mapping the Organizational Universe: Using our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine, we identify every related entity: the local chapter, its housing corporation (like the “Beta Nu Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity Housing Corporation Inc” in Frisco, EIN 462267515), alumni associations, and the national headquarters. Each is a potential source of liability and insurance coverage.
- Uncovering Pattern Evidence: We subpoena records from the national fraternity to reveal prior complaints and violations at this chapter or others. We obtain the university’s conduct files on the organization. In the Bermudez case, this means seeking Pi Kappa Phi’s national risk management files and UH’s prior disciplinary records for Beta Nu.
- Expert Collaboration: We work with a network of experts: emergency medicine physicians to explain injuries like rhabdomyolysis, psychologists to document PTSD, economists to calculate lifelong impacts, and digital forensics specialists.
Overcoming Institutional Defenses
Fraternities, sororities, and universities have sophisticated playbooks. We know them because we’ve fought them.
- “The Pledge Consented”: We counter with Texas law §37.155 and expert testimony on group coercion and power imbalance.
- “This Was a Rogue Chapter”: We expose the national organization’s knowledge of recurring hazing methods (e.g., forced drinking on “Big/Little” night) through their own internal communications and prior incident reports.
- “It Happened Off-Campus”: We argue liability based on sponsorship, control, and foreseeability—hazing moves off-campus precisely to avoid scrutiny, which national and university policies should anticipate.
- “Insurance Doesn’t Cover Intentional Acts”: Our attorney, Mr. Lupe Peña, spent years as an insurance defense attorney. He knows how insurers argue these exclusions and how to navigate coverage disputes to maximize recovery for our clients.
Damages in a Hazing Case: What Can Be Recovered
The goal of a civil lawsuit is to make the victim whole and hold wrongdoers accountable. Recoverable damages include:
- Economic Damages: All past and future medical expenses (ER, hospitalization, surgery, therapy, lifelong care for permanent injuries), lost wages, and loss of future earning capacity.
- Non-Economic Damages: Compensation for physical pain and suffering, severe emotional distress, psychological trauma (PTSD, depression, anxiety), humiliation, and loss of enjoyment of life.
- Wrongful Death Damages (in fatal cases): Funeral costs, loss of financial support, and the profound loss of companionship, love, and guidance for the family.
- Punitive Damages: In cases of particularly egregious or reckless conduct, Texas law may allow damages intended to punish the defendant and deter future behavior.
We work with life care planners and economists to build a complete picture of the harm, ensuring we pursue full and fair compensation. For more on our wrongful death practice, visit https://attorney911.com/law-practice-areas/wrongful-death-claim-lawyer/
Practical Steps for Rowlett Parents & Students
For Parents: A 48-Hour Action Plan
- Prioritize Safety & Health: If injured or intoxicated, get to an ER immediately. Your child’s health is paramount.
- Preserve All Evidence: Help your child screenshot every relevant group chat, text, and social media post. Take clear, dated photos of any injuries. Secure any physical items (torn clothing, paddles, bottles). Do not delete anything.
- Document Everything: Write a detailed, chronological account of what your child tells you, including names, dates, locations, and witnesses.
- Seek Legal Counsel Before Reporting: Contact a hazing attorney before making formal statements to the university or police. We can guide you on how to report while protecting your child’s rights and evidence. Call us at 1-888-ATTY-911.
- Avoid Common Pitfalls: Do not confront the fraternity. Do not sign any documents from the university. Do not let your child attend “one last meeting.” Do not post details on social media. Learn more about critical mistakes in our video: Client Mistakes That Can Ruin Your Injury Case.
For Students: Is This Hazing? How to Exit Safely
- Trust Your Instincts: If you feel coerced, unsafe, humiliated, or forced to do something you wouldn’t otherwise do, it’s likely hazing.
- Your Safety Comes First: You have the right to leave any situation that feels dangerous. Your membership is not worth your health or life.
- Know Your Reporting Options: You can report anonymously through university hotlines or the National Anti-Hazing Hotline (1-888-NOT-HAZE). Texas law protects good-faith reporters.
- Preserve Evidence: Take screenshots. Save emails. Tell a trusted friend or family member what is happening. This creates a record.
Why Attorney911 for Rowlett Hazing Cases
When your family is in crisis, you need advocates who combine deep legal expertise with a genuine understanding of the institutional forces at play. The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC (Attorney911) was built for complex, high-stakes litigation.
Our Unmatched Qualifications for Hazing Cases
1. Insurance Insider Knowledge: Our attorney, Mr. Lupe Peña, is a former insurance defense lawyer for a national firm. He spent years on the other side, learning exactly how fraternity and university insurers evaluate claims, deploy delay tactics, and fight coverage. He knows their playbook, and we use that knowledge to secure maximum compensation for our clients. Learn more about Mr. Peña’s background.
2. Proven Experience Against Billion-Dollar Defendants: Managing partner Ralph Manginello was one of the few plaintiff attorneys involved in the BP Texas City explosion litigation. Taking on a corporation with limitless resources taught us how to investigate root-cause institutional failure, manage massive discovery, and stand firm in federal court. National fraternities and major universities employ the same defense tactics.
3. A Data-Driven Investigative Engine: We don’t rely on guesswork. We use our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine—built from thousands of public records on Greek organizations—to quickly identify every entity with potential liability and insurance. We know how to trace the connections from a local chapter to its national headquarters and related foundations.
4. Dual Civil & Criminal Capability: Ralph Manginello is a member of the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA). This means we understand the criminal exposure that may accompany hazing, allowing us to effectively advise witnesses or clients navigating both civil and criminal proceedings. Our criminal defense expertise is detailed here.
5. A Track Record of Serious Injury Results: We have recovered multi-million dollar settlements for clients with catastrophic brain injuries, amputations, and wrongful death. We work with leading medical experts and economists to ensure the full scope of our clients’ damages is presented.
Call to Action for Rowlett Families
If hazing has injured your child or turned your family’s world upside down, you do not have to navigate this alone. The universities and national organizations have teams of lawyers whose job is to minimize their exposure. You need a team whose only job is to fight for your family.
Contact The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC (Attorney911) today for a free, confidential consultation.
We will listen carefully to your story, review any evidence you have, and explain your legal options clearly and honestly. We handle cases on a contingency fee basis—you pay no attorney fees unless we win your case.
Call us 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911).
Direct Line: (713) 528-9070
Website: https://attorney911.com
Email: ralph@atty911.com | lupe@atty911.com
Se habla Español. Mr. Peña provides fluent Spanish-language legal services.
Whether your child was hazed at a university in Dallas, Austin, College Station, Houston, or beyond, we are here to help Rowlett families seek justice, accountability, and the compensation needed to heal and move forward.
Legal Disclaimer
This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney–client relationship between you and The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC.
Hazing laws, university policies, and legal precedents can change. The information in this guide is current as of late 2025 but may not reflect the most recent developments. Every hazing case is unique, and outcomes depend on the specific facts, evidence, applicable law, and many other factors.
If you or your child has been affected by hazing, we strongly encourage you to consult with a qualified Texas attorney who can review your specific situation, explain your legal rights, and advise you on the best course of action for your family.
The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC / Attorney911
Houston, Austin, and Beaumont, Texas
Call: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
Direct: (713) 528-9070 | Cell: (713) 443-4781
Website: https://attorney911.com
Email: ralph@atty911.com
Plain Text Links to Key Resources
News Coverage of the UH Pi Kappa Phi Case:
- Click2Houston Report:
https://www.click2houston.com/news/local/2025/11/21/only-on-2-lawsuit-alleges-severe-hazing-at-university-of-houstons-pi-kappa-phi-chapter-fraternity/ - ABC13 Coverage:
https://abc13.com/post/waterboarding-forced-eating-physical-punishment-lawsuit-alleges-abuse-faced-injured-pledge-uhs-pi-kappa-phi-fraternity/18186418/
Attorney911 Educational Videos:
- Using Your Cellphone to Document Evidence:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs - Texas Statutes of Limitations:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRHwg8tV02c - Client Mistakes That Can Ruin Your Case:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3IYsoxOSxY - How Contingency Fees Work:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc
Attorney911 Main Website & Practice Areas:
- Main Website & Contact:
https://attorney911.com - Wrongful Death Practice:
https://attorney911.com/law-practice-areas/wrongful-death-claim-lawyer/ - Criminal Defense Practice:
https://attorney911.com/law-practice-areas/criminal-defense-lawyers/