Hazing, Fraternities, and University Accountability: A Complete Legal Guide for New Chapel Hill, TX Families
If Your Child is in Danger Right Now: Act Immediately
CALL 911 for any medical emergency. 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 critical first 48 hours after a hazing incident, evidence disappears. Before confronting anyone or letting your child delete messages from their phone, contact us for urgent guidance on evidence preservation and legal protection.
An Unthinkable Night for a New Chapel Hill Family
It’s a fall evening at an off-campus fraternity house near a major Texas university. Your child—a bright student from right here in Smith County—is at a “bid acceptance” event. What begins with laughter and camaraderie turns grim. Older members are handing out bottles of liquor, demanding that pledges finish them. There are chants, cellphone cameras recording, and an escalating series of dares that cross from tradition into degradation and danger.
Your child wants to fit in, to belong. They drink more than they ever have. As the night wears on, someone collapses. Others vomit. But nobody calls for help immediately; there’s a whispered fear of “getting the chapter shut down.” Hours later, a frantic call comes to your home in New Chapel Hill. Your child is in the ER with alcohol poisoning, or worse, suffering from a severe muscle breakdown called rhabdomyolysis that is attacking their kidneys. The university’s initial response is a generic statement about “taking all allegations seriously.” You feel powerless, angry, and utterly lost.
This scenario is not a hypothetical. It is the reality of modern hazing, and it is happening right now on Texas campuses where New Chapel Hill students pursue their education. At Attorney911, we have seen this nightmare unfold for Texas families, and we are actively fighting it.
Right now, we are leading the litigation in one of Texas’s most serious recent hazing cases: the lawsuit on behalf of Leonel Bermudez against the University of Houston, the Pi Kappa Phi national fraternity, and 13 individual members. As reported by Click2Houston and ABC13, Bermudez, a UH student, endured a pledge period in Fall 2025 that included being forced to carry a humiliating “pledge fanny pack,” subjected to extreme physical workouts, sprayed in the face with a hose “similar to waterboarding,” and forced to consume excessive amounts of food until vomiting. The abuse culminated in a November 3rd workout of over 100 push-ups and 500 squats, which led to rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure. His urine turned brown, he was hospitalized for four days, and he faces a risk of permanent kidney damage.
This case is proof that severe, injurious hazing is not a relic of the past; it is a present and active danger. For parents in New Chapel Hill, Tyler, and across Smith County, this guide exists to cut through the confusion and secrecy. We will explain what hazing really looks like in 2025, the Texas laws designed to stop it, the national patterns that repeat on our campuses, and the legal pathways to accountability and recovery for your family.
Hazing in 2025: What It Really Looks Like in Texas
Hazing is no longer just about clandestine paddlings in a basement. It is a sophisticated ecosystem of psychological pressure, digital control, and physical risk, often disguised as “team building” or “tradition.” For New Chapel Hill parents, understanding its modern forms is the first step to recognizing the signs.
A Modern, Expansive Definition
Texas law defines hazing broadly and powerfully. Under Texas Education Code Chapter 37, hazing is any intentional, knowing, or reckless act—on or off campus—directed against a student for the purpose of initiation, affiliation, or maintaining membership in a group, that:
- Endangers the mental or physical health or safety of that student.
Critically, the location does not matter (off-campus houses, Airbnb rentals, remote parks), and the victim’s “consent” is not a legal defense. The law recognizes that true consent is impossible in an environment of peer pressure, power imbalance, and fear of exclusion.
The Three Tiers of Modern Hazing
1. Subtle Hazing (The Gateway)
These acts establish power imbalances and condition new members to accept control. They are often dismissed as “harmless.”
- Digital Servitude: 24/7 monitoring via GroupMe or WhatsApp; demands for instant responses at all hours; mandatory location-sharing.
- Forced Labor: Acting as perpetual designated drivers; cleaning older members’ apartments; running personal errands.
- Social & Psychological Control: Assigning derogatory nicknames; enforcing rules about who pledges can socialize with; mandatory events that disrupt sleep and academics.
2. Harassment Hazing (Escalation)
This causes clear emotional or physical discomfort and creates a hostile environment.
- Sleep Deprivation: “Midnight meetings,” 3 AM wake-up calls for “workouts,” multi-day events with minimal rest.
- Verbal Abuse & Humiliation: Yelling sessions, “grilling” interviews, forced public performances in embarrassing costumes.
- Forced Consumption & Exposure: Eating disgusting food mixtures (like milk, hot dogs, and peppercorns until vomiting); lying in filth; exposure to extreme cold or heat without proper clothing.
3. Violent Hazing (Catastrophic Risk)
These acts have a high potential for severe injury, sexual assault, or death. This is what we see in the worst cases, like the UH Pi Kappa Phi lawsuit.
- Forced/Coerced Alcohol Consumption: The single most common cause of hazing deaths. “Big/Little” bottle challenges, lineup drinking games, “Bible study” where wrong answers mean drinking.
- Extreme Physical Abuse: “Smokings” with hundreds of push-ups or squats leading to rhabdomyolysis (as in the Bermudez case); paddling; beatings; dangerous “trust fall” rituals.
- Sexualized Violence: Forced nudity; simulated sexual acts; sexual assault.
- Kidnapping & Restraint: Being taken to remote locations blindfolded; being tied up or bound.
Where Hazing Happens: Beyond the Stereotype
While fraternities and sororities are often the focus, hazing is an institutional problem across campus:
- Fraternities & Sororities (IFC, Panhellenic, NPHC, Multicultural councils)
- Athletic Teams (from football to cheerleading)
- Corps of Cadets and other military-style organizations
- Spirit & Tradition Groups (like Texas Cowboys or Aggie Band)
- Marching Bands and Performing Arts Groups
- Academic and Service Clubs
The common threads are hierarchy, secrecy, and a twisted sense of tradition that values loyalty to the group over individual safety.
Texas Hazing Law & Liability: What New Chapel Hill Families Need to Know
Texas has a robust legal framework to combat hazing. Understanding it is crucial for holding responsible parties accountable, both criminally and civilly.
Texas Criminal Hazing Statutes (Education Code Chapter 37)
- Base Offense: Hazing is generally a Class B Misdemeanor, punishable by up to 180 days in jail and a fine up to $2,000.
- Enhanced Charges: If the hazing causes bodily injury, it becomes a Class A Misdemeanor. If it causes serious bodily injury or death, it is a State Jail Felony.
- Individual Accountability: Members or officers who fail to report hazing they are aware of, or who retaliate against someone who reports, also commit misdemeanors.
- Organizational Liability: The fraternity, sorority, or club itself can be fined up to $10,000 per violation if it authorized or encouraged the hazing.
- Good Faith Protection: Individuals who in good faith report hazing or seek medical assistance are immune from civil liability and student discipline for their own minor conduct (like underage drinking) related to the reported incident. This is designed to remove the single biggest barrier to calling 911.
Civil Liability: The Path to Accountability and Recovery
A criminal case, brought by the state, aims to punish. A civil lawsuit, which our firm files on behalf of victims, aims to compensate for harms and force institutional change. They can, and often do, proceed simultaneously.
In a civil hazing case, we can pursue claims against a wide universe of responsible parties:
- The Individual Perpetrators: The students who planned, carried out, or actively participated in the hazing.
- The Local Chapter: As an entity, for fostering a culture that permitted or encouraged the conduct.
- The National Fraternity/Sorority Headquarters: Arguably the deepest pocket, for negligent supervision, failure to enforce their own policies, and having prior knowledge of dangerous patterns at other chapters.
- The University: For negligent supervision, deliberate indifference to a known risk, or violations of federal statutes like Title IX or the Clery Act.
- Third Parties: Property owners of unsafe housing, bars that overserved alcohol (under Texas dram shop law), or security companies that failed in their duties.
Why the National Organization is So Often a Key Defendant: In the Bermudez case, Pi Kappa Phi’s national headquarters is a defendant. We allege they failed to supervise the Beta Nu chapter appropriately. National organizations collect dues, provide training manuals, and have the ultimate authority to suspend or revoke charters. When they have a history of similar incidents at other chapters (as Pi Kappa Phi did with the Andrew Coffey death at Florida State), it demonstrates foreseeability—they knew or should have known this type of harm could occur, strengthening claims of negligence.
Federal Legal Overlays
- Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024): Requires universities receiving federal aid to publicly report hazing incidents and strengthen prevention programs, with full implementation by 2026.
- Title IX: If hazing involves sexual harassment or gender-based discrimination, it triggers the university’s Title IX obligations for investigation and response.
- Clery Act: Requires universities to report certain crime statistics, which can include hazing-related assaults.
National Hazing Cases: The Patterns That Predict Tragedy
The UH Pi Kappa Phi case fits into a devastating national pattern. These landmark cases are not just historical footnotes; they are the legal precedents and cautionary tales that define the duty of care owed to students. They show how the same scripts of abuse repeat across the country.
The Alcohol Poisoning Pattern
- Stone Foltz – Bowling Green State University, Pi Kappa Alpha (2021): A 20-year-old pledge died after being forced to drink an entire bottle of alcohol during a “Big/Little” event. The result was a $10 million settlement (with $7M from the national fraternity) and criminal convictions. It showed the lethal predictability of forced drinking rituals.
- Max Gruver – LSU, Phi Delta Theta (2017): Died from alcohol toxicity after a “Bible study” drinking game where wrong answers mandated drinking. His death led to Louisiana’s Max Gruver Act, creating felony hazing charges.
- Andrew Coffey – Florida State University, Pi Kappa Phi (2017): Died from acute alcohol poisoning at a “Big Brother” event. This case is directly relevant to the UH lawsuit, as it involves the same national fraternity and a similar hazing script.
The Physical & Ritualized Abuse Pattern
- Timothy Piazza – Penn State, Beta Theta Pi (2017): Died from traumatic brain injuries after a bid acceptance night with catastrophic falls, captured on house security cameras. The delayed call for help led to one of the largest hazing prosecutions in U.S. history and Pennsylvania’s Timothy J. Piazza Anti-Hazing Law.
- Chun “Michael” Deng – Baruch College, Pi Delta Psi (2013): Died from brain injuries during a blindfolded, violent “glass ceiling” ritual at a remote retreat. The national fraternity was convicted of felony charges, a rare instance of organizational criminal liability.
The Athletic & Institutional Cover-Up Pattern
- Northwestern University Football (2023-2025): Widespread allegations of sexualized and racist hazing led to multiple lawsuits, the firing of the head coach, and confidential settlements, proving that multi-million-dollar athletic programs are not immune.
- Danny Santulli – University of Missouri, Phi Gamma Delta (2021): Suffered permanent, severe brain damage from forced drinking. His family settled with 22 defendants, illustrating the complex web of liability in a single case.
What This Means for New Chapel Hill Families: These cases create a roadmap. They establish that national fraternities and universities are on notice about these dangerous patterns. When the same patterns emerge at a Texas school, it powerfully supports claims that the harm was foreseeable and preventable.
Texas University Focus: Where New Chapel Hill Students Gather
Families in Smith County send their children to universities across Texas. The University of Texas at Tyler is in your backyard, while many students also attend the state’s flagship campuses. Hazing risks exist at all of them.
The University of Texas at Tyler (Local to Smith County)
As the primary university within Smith County, UT Tyler is where many New Chapel Hill students begin or continue their education. While its Greek system is smaller than the flagship campuses, the risks and legal principles are identical.
- Campus Snapshot: A growing campus with fraternity and sorority life under the umbrella of the University of Texas System.
- Legal Jurisdiction: A hazing incident at UT Tyler would involve the UT Tyler Police Department and potentially the Smith County Sheriff’s Office. Civil lawsuits could be filed in Smith County courts.
- Parent Action: The same evidence preservation and reporting steps apply. The close proximity means New Chapel Hill families can be directly involved in meetings with campus administration and local counsel.
The University of Houston & The Active Pi Kappa Phi Case
The Bermudez case is a live example of how a hazing crisis unfolds at a major Texas institution.
- The Institutional Response: According to the Click2Houston coverage, UH called the conduct “deeply disturbing” and promised cooperation with law enforcement. Pi Kappa Phi’s national headquarters suspended the chapter on November 6, 2025, and the members voted to surrender their charter on November 14, 2025, shutting it down.
- The Legal Battlefield: The lawsuit names 17 defendants: UH, the UH System Board of Regents, Pi Kappa Phi nationals, the local housing corporation, and 13 individual fraternity leaders (president, pledgemaster, risk manager, etc.). This demonstrates a comprehensive legal strategy to pursue every entity with responsibility and insurance coverage.
- For UH Families: This case sets a recent, severe precedent. It shows that UH chapters are engaging in dangerously abusive behavior and that the legal system is currently being tested to hold the full network accountable.
Texas A&M University
With one of the nation’s largest Corps of Cadets and a powerful Greek system, A&M has faced significant, public hazing issues.
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chemical Burn Case (2021): Pledges alleged they were doused with a mixture containing industrial-strength cleaner, causing severe chemical burns that required skin graft surgeries. The chapter was suspended, and a lawsuit was filed.
- Corps of Cadets “Roasted Pig” Lawsuit (2023): A cadet alleged degrading hazing, including being bound between beds in a simulated sexual position with an apple in his mouth. He sought over $1 million in damages.
- Takeaway for Families: Hazing at A&M manifests in both Greek life and the revered Corps tradition. The university’s strong institutional culture can sometimes make reporting feel daunting, but the law provides clear avenues for accountability.
University of Texas at Austin
UT Austin maintains a public Hazing Violations page, offering a degree of transparency.
- Public Records: The page lists organizations, dates, and sanctions. For example, Pi Kappa Alpha was sanctioned in 2023 for forcing new members to consume milk and perform strenuous calisthenics.
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon Assault Case (2024): An Australian exchange student allegedly assaulted at a party suffered a dislocated leg, broken nose, and other injuries, leading to a lawsuit.
- Takeaway for Families: This public log is a double-edged sword. It shows the university taking action, but the recurring violations prove the persistent nature of the problem. These public records can also be used as evidence in a civil case to show a pattern of known issues.
Southern Methodist University & Baylor University
These private, prominent universities have their own histories.
- SMU: Has dealt with hazing incidents in groups like Kappa Alpha Order. As a private institution, its internal processes may be less transparent, necessitating aggressive legal discovery in a lawsuit.
- Baylor: Has faced scrutiny over hazing within its baseball program and broader cultural challenges. Its religious affiliation does not shield it from standard negligence or premises liability claims.
The Organizations Behind the Letters: National Histories Matter
When a chapter at UT, A&M, or UH hazes, it rarely invents a new script. It follows patterns established by its national organization’s history across the country. This “pattern evidence” is legally powerful.
For example, our client’s case against Pi Kappa Phi is strengthened by the national organization’s prior knowledge from the Andrew Coffey death at Florida State. Similarly, when we see a Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter at Texas A&M accused of causing chemical burns, we look to SAE’s national history of alcohol-related deaths and injuries at other schools. This isn’t about vilifying organizations; it’s about establishing foreseeability and negligent supervision.
A Sample of the Public Records Web in Texas:
To illustrate the complex network of liable entities, our firm maintains a Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine grounded in public data. For a New Chapel Hill family, this means we don’t start from zero. Below is a small sample of the types of registered entities we can identify in Texas. These are not accusations, but illustrations of the organizational landscape.
IRS B83-Registered Greek Organizations (Sample):
- Beta Nu Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity Housing Corporation Inc | EIN: 46-2267515 | Frisco, TX 75035
- Sigma Chi Fraternity Zeta Eta | EIN: 75-6060974 | Commerce, TX 75429 (Texas A&M University-Commerce)
- Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi | EIN: 90-0293166 | College Station, TX 77843 (Texas A&M University)
- Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity | EIN: 74-6064445 | Nederland, TX 77627 (Epsilon Kappa Chapter)
- Kappa Sigma – Mu Camma Chapter Inc | EIN: 13-3048786 | College Station, TX 77845
Cause IQ Metro Organizations (Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land Metro – Sample):
This metro area has 188 Greek-related organizations according to our data.
- Texas District of Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity (Houston, TX)
- Delta Sigma Theta Sorority – Houston Alumnae (Houston, TX)
- Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority – Beta Sigma Chapter (Houston, TX)
Brands Appearing in Both IRS and Metro Data (Cross-Validated):
Organizations like Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority and the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi appear in both IRS tax records and metro organization lists, showing how national brands have multiple legal entities operating across Texas.
This data underpins a critical legal strategy: identifying every corporation, housing entity, and alumni chapter that may hold insurance or bear responsibility, ensuring no liable party escapes accountability simply because they operate behind a complex corporate veil.
Building a Hazing Case: Evidence, Damages, and Strategy
If your family is facing this crisis, you need to know what comes next. A successful case is built on evidence, a clear understanding of harm, and a strategic approach to powerful defendants.
Critical Evidence to Preserve IMMEDIATELY
Evidence vanishes within days. Watch our video on using your phone to document evidence.
- Digital Communications: SCREENSHOT EVERYTHING. GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage, Instagram DMs, Discord. Capture full threads with timestamps and sender names. Do not let your child delete anything out of shame or fear.
- Photos/Videos: Injuries (photograph daily to show progression), the location of the incident, alcohol bottles, paddles, or props used.
- Medical Records: Go to the ER or a doctor. Tell them you were hazed. Get copies of all records, toxicology reports, and diagnoses.
- Witness List: Names and contact information for other pledges, roommates, or bystanders.
- Physical Evidence: Save stained or torn clothing. Do not wash it.
The Full Scope of Damages in a Hazing Case
The harm extends far beyond medical bills. We fight to recover compensation for:
- Economic Damages: All medical expenses (ER, hospitalization, surgery, future therapy), lost wages if a parent must take off work, and diminished future earning capacity if injuries are permanent.
- Non-Economic Damages: Physical pain, emotional distress, PTSD, humiliation, loss of enjoyment of life.
- Wrongful Death Damages (if applicable): Funeral costs, loss of financial support, and the profound grief and loss of companionship suffered by parents and siblings.
Navigating the Defense Playbook
Universities and national fraternities have sophisticated defenses. We know them because Mr. Lupe Peña, our associate attorney, spent years as an insurance defense attorney for large companies. We anticipate their moves:
- “The Victim Consented”: Texas law explicitly rejects this. We argue coercion and power imbalance.
- “It Was a Rogue Chapter”: We use national pattern evidence to show the conduct was foreseeable.
- “It Happened Off-Campus”: We establish the university’s and national’s control and knowledge over off-campus activities.
- Insurance Coverage Fights: We identify all potential insurance policies and fight exclusions meant to deny coverage.
Practical Guides for New Chapel Hill Parents, Students, and Witnesses
For Parents: A Step-by-Step Action Plan
- Prioritize Safety & Health: Get immediate medical attention. Trust the symptoms, not assurances.
- Preserve Evidence: Help your child screenshot and back up all digital communications. Photograph injuries.
- Document Everything: Write down what your child tells you, with dates and names, while it’s fresh.
- Consult an Attorney BEFORE Reporting: Once you report to the university, their legal team takes over. An attorney can guide you on how to report while protecting your rights. Contact us at 1-888-ATTY-911.
- Avoid Critical Mistakes: Do NOT confront the fraternity. Do NOT sign anything from the university or an insurance adjuster. Do NOT post details on social media.
For Students: Is This Hazing? What Should I Do?
- The Decision Test: Would you do this if you truly had a free choice, without fear of social exclusion? Is it dangerous, degrading, or secret? If yes, it’s hazing.
- Your Safety First: If you are in danger, call 911. Texas law protects good-faith reporters.
- You Can Leave: You have the legal right to quit. Send a clear text or email stating your resignation. You do not owe them an in-person meeting.
- Preserve Evidence: Screenshot, record (Texas is a one-party consent state), and save everything.
Critical Mistakes That Can Ruin Your Case
We detail these in our video on client mistakes that can ruin your injury case.
- Deleting Evidence: This looks like a cover-up and destroys your leverage.
- Confronting the Fraternity Directly: This triggers their legal defense and evidence destruction.
- Signing University “Resolution” Forms: These often contain waivers of your right to sue.
- Waiting for the University to “Handle It”: Internal processes are not designed for victim compensation. The clock is ticking on the statute of limitations.
Frequently Asked Questions for Texas Families
- “Can we sue the university in Texas?” Yes, depending on the facts. Public universities have some immunity, but exceptions exist for gross negligence. Private universities like SMU and Baylor have fewer protections. The key is building a case that shows their knowledge and failure to act.
- “Is there a time limit?” Yes. Generally, you have two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit in Texas, but exceptions apply. Do not delay. Watch our video on the Texas statute of limitations.
- “How much will this cost?” We work on a contingency fee basis. This means we only get paid if we win your case, taking a percentage of the recovery. There are no upfront fees. Learn more in our video on how contingency fees work.
Why New Chapel Hill Families Choose Attorney911
When your child has been hurt by an institution that values its reputation over their safety, you need advocates who are not intimidated. The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC (Attorney911) brings a unique combination of insider knowledge and proven trial power to hazing cases.
1. Active, High-Stakes Texas Hazing Litigation: We are not theorists. We are currently counsel for Leonel Bermudez in the $10 million lawsuit against the University of Houston and Pi Kappa Phi. We are in the fight right now, deposing officials, battling national defense firms, and seeking justice for a Texas family. This is your local proof of our capability.
2. Former Insurance Defense Insider Knowledge: Our attorney, Mr. Lupe Peña (he/him), spent years defending large insurance companies and corporations. He knows exactly how fraternity and university insurers will try to undervalue, delay, and deny claims. We know their playbook because we used to run it. This is an invaluable advantage in negotiation and litigation.
3. Complex Institutional Litigation Experience: Managing partner Ralph Manginello was one of the few Texas attorneys involved in the BP Texas City explosion litigation, taking on a billion-dollar corporate defendant. National fraternities and major universities have equally deep pockets and aggressive defense teams. We have faced them before and are not deterred.
4. Data-Driven Investigation: We don’t start from scratch. We use tools like our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine to map the network of organizations, housing corporations, and insurance policies behind a chapter. For New Chapel Hill families, this means we can immediately identify all potential sources of accountability and recovery.
5. Compassionate, Client-Centered Advocacy: We are fathers and members of this community. We understand the trauma and confusion your family is experiencing. We guide you through every step, keeping you informed and empowered. Our goal is not just financial recovery, but accountability and change to protect future students.
Your Next Step: A Free, Confidential Consultation
If you are a parent in New Chapel Hill, Tyler, or anywhere in Smith County and you suspect or know your child has been hazed, time is your most critical asset. Evidence disappears, witnesses become reluctant, and universities begin their containment strategies.
We offer a free, completely confidential consultation to evaluate your situation. In this meeting, we will:
- Listen carefully to your story.
- Review any evidence you have preserved.
- Explain the legal options available under Texas and federal law.
- Discuss the realistic paths forward, including potential timelines.
- Answer all your questions about the process and our fee structure.
You are under no obligation to hire us. Our goal is to ensure you have the information needed to make the best decision for your child and your family.
Contact The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC / Attorney911 Today:
- Phone: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911) – Available 24/7 for Emergencies
- Direct: (713) 528-9070
- Email: ralph@atty911.com or lupe@atty911.com
- Website: https://attorney911.com
- Se habla Español: Mr. Lupe Peña provides fluent Spanish-language legal services.
You don’t have to navigate this crisis alone. Let us use our experience, resources, and determination to fight for your child’s recovery and for the accountability that can prevent the next tragedy.
Plain Text Links to Key Resources
News Coverage of Leonel Bermudez / UH Pi Kappa Phi Case: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/https://abc13.com/post/waterboarding-forced-eating-physical-punishment-lawsuit-alleges-abuse-faced-injured-pledge-uhs-pi-kappa-phi-fraternity/18186418/https://hoodline.com/2025/11/university-of-houston-and-pi-kappa-phi-fraternity-face-10m-lawsuit-over-alleged-hazing-and-abuse/
Attorney911 Educational Videos:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs – Using your phone to document evidencehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRHwg8tV02c – Texas statutes of limitationshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3IYsoxOSxY – Client mistakes that can ruin a casehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc – How contingency fees work
Main Firm Website:https://attorney911.com
Legal Disclaimer
This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Every case is unique, and outcomes depend on specific facts and law. If you need legal advice, please contact The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC, at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a confidential consultation.