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City of Beasley’s Ultimate Toxic Exposure & Dangerous Industry Legal Warriors: Attorney 911 of Houston Fights Johns-Manville, Monsanto, 3M, BP & ExxonMobil for Workers Poisoned by Asbestos Fibers 0.1-10 Microns, Benzene at 1 PPM Causing AML Leukemia, PFAS Forever Chemicals Never Breaking Down in Your Blood, and Camp Lejeune Water Contamination at 3,400x Safe Limits—27+ Years of Federal Courtroom Victories Including $2.1B BP Texas City Refinery Explosion Litigation, $30B+ Asbestos Trust Fund Claims, $12.5B 3M PFAS Settlement, $708M+ Camp Lejeune Payouts, and Mesothelioma Verdicts Ranging $5M-$250M+—Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Pena Knows How Corporate Legal Teams From Baker Botts & Kirkland & Ellis Suppress Your Claim—We Advance All Costs, No Fee Unless We Win, 24/7 Rapid Response Team with Spoliation Letters Within 24 Hours, and 11 Simultaneous Compensation Pathways for Maritime/Jones Act Seamen, FELA Railroad Workers, Refinery Explosion Survivors, Construction Scaffold Falls, Crane Collapses, Electrocutions, Trench Cave-Ins, and Wrongful Death Families—Call 1-888-ATTY-911 Now for Your Free Consultation

April 15, 2026 50 min read
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Toxic Exposure & Dangerous Industry Workers Legal Guide for City of Beasley, Texas

If You Worked in City of Beasley’s Industrial Corridor, You May Have Been Exposed — And You Have Rights

For decades, workers in City of Beasley, Texas — especially those in refineries, chemical plants, construction, railroads, and maritime industries — were exposed to asbestos, benzene, silica, PFAS, and other deadly toxins without warning. Many employers knew the risks and hid them. Now, workers and their families are paying the price with mesothelioma, leukemia, lung cancer, kidney disease, and other devastating illnesses.

At Attorney 911, we don’t just handle toxic exposure cases — we’ve litigated them at the highest level. Our founding attorney, Ralph Manginello, was part of the legal team in the BP Texas City Refinery explosion ($2.1 billion total case) — one of the deadliest industrial disasters in U.S. history. Our associate attorney, Lupe Peña, is a former insurance defense attorney who knows exactly how corporate defendants minimize, delay, and deny toxic exposure claims. He used to work for them. Now, he works against them.

This guide explains:
What toxic substances you were exposed to in City of Beasley’s industries
Which diseases are linked to those exposures — and how to recognize them
Who is responsible — specific companies that operated in City of Beasley
How much compensation you may qualify for — trust funds, lawsuits, and government programs
Why you need an attorney NOW — evidence is disappearing, trust funds are depleting, and statutes of limitations are running

If you or a loved one worked in City of Beasley’s industrial corridor and have been diagnosed with mesothelioma, leukemia, lung cancer, kidney disease, or any other occupational illness, call 1-888-ATTY-911 now. The consultation is free, and you pay nothing unless we win.

Part 1: City of Beasley’s Toxic Exposure History — What You Breathed, What You Handled, What They Hid

City of Beasley sits in Fort Bend County, part of the Texas Gulf Coast Petrochemical Corridor — one of the most industrialized regions in the world. For over a century, this area has been home to:

Industry Major Employers Near City of Beasley Toxins Workers Were Exposed To Diseases Linked to Exposure
Oil Refineries ExxonMobil (Baytown), Shell (Deer Park), LyondellBasell, Valero (Texas City), Motiva (Port Arthur) Benzene, asbestos, hydrogen sulfide, silica, PFAS Leukemia, lymphoma, lung cancer, kidney cancer, mesothelioma, silicosis
Chemical Plants Dow Chemical (Freeport), BASF, Huntsman, Celanese, INEOS, Formosa Plastics Benzene, vinyl chloride, formaldehyde, PFAS, ethylene oxide Leukemia, lymphoma, liver cancer, bladder cancer, breast cancer
Construction & Demolition Bechtel, Fluor, KBR, local contractors Asbestos, silica, lead, welding fumes Mesothelioma, asbestosis, silicosis, lung cancer
Railroads Union Pacific, BNSF, Kansas City Southern Asbestos (brake shoes, insulation), diesel exhaust, creosote Mesothelioma, lung cancer, leukemia, asbestosis
Maritime & Shipyards Todd Shipyards (Houston), Bollinger Shipyards, BAE Systems Asbestos (insulation, gaskets, lagging), welding fumes, benzene Mesothelioma, lung cancer, asbestosis, leukemia
Power Plants NRG Energy, Calpine, local utilities Asbestos, coal ash, radiation (nuclear plants), benzene Mesothelioma, lung cancer, leukemia, radiation-related cancers
Agriculture & Pesticide Use Local farms, crop dusting operations Glyphosate (Roundup), organophosphates, paraquat Non-Hodgkin lymphoma, Parkinson’s disease, kidney disease

The Corporate Concealment Playbook — What They Knew and When They Knew It

For decades, the companies operating in City of Beasley’s industrial corridor knew their products and workplaces were killing workers — and they chose profits over safety. Here’s the documented proof:

Toxin What They Knew When They Knew What They Did
Asbestos Causes mesothelioma and lung cancer 1930s (Sumner Simpson letters) Suppressed medical research, ghostwrote “safe” studies, hid dangers from workers
Benzene Causes leukemia and aplastic anemia 1940s (Dow Chemical internal studies) Fought OSHA regulations, hid exposure data, blamed workers for “poor hygiene”
PFAS (“Forever Chemicals”) Causes cancer, liver damage, immune suppression 1970s (3M internal blood studies) Buried research, lobbied against regulations, continued using PFAS in firefighting foam
Silica Causes silicosis and lung cancer 1930s (U.S. Public Health Service reports) Fought safety regulations, hid dust exposure levels, blamed workers for “poor ventilation”
Glyphosate (Roundup) Causes non-Hodgkin lymphoma 1980s (Monsanto internal studies) Ghostwrote “independent” studies, attacked scientists who found cancer link, hid evidence from EPA

The Sumner Simpson Letters (1935) — The smoking gun of the asbestos industry.

  • Sumner Simpson (Raybestos-Manhattan) wrote to Vandiver Brown (Johns-Manville): “I think the less said about asbestos, the better off we are.”
  • Johns-Manville suppressed its own 1933 study showing asbestos was killing workers.
  • The asbestos industry funded “research” to attack Dr. Irving Selikoff’s 1964 studies proving asbestos caused mesothelioma.

The Monsanto Papers — How Roundup’s cancer link was hidden.

  • Monsanto ghostwrote studies claiming Roundup was safe.
  • They classified internal studies as “confidential” to hide cancer risks.
  • They attacked the World Health Organization (IARC) when it classified glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic.”

The 3M PFAS Memos — “Forever chemicals” were known to be toxic for 50 years.

  • 3M’s own scientists found PFAS accumulated in workers’ blood in the 1970s.
  • They buried the data and continued selling PFAS-containing products.
  • Today, PFAS contamination is found in City of Beasley’s water supplies near industrial sites.

The BP Texas City Refinery Explosion (2005)15 workers killed, 180 injured — the deadliest U.S. refinery accident in a generation.

  • OSHA found 301 willful violations — the most ever issued in a single inspection.
  • BP knew the blowdown drum was unsafe but chose to save money instead of fixing it.
  • Ralph Manginello was part of the litigation team that held BP accountable — $2.1 billion in total settlements and fines.

If you worked in City of Beasley’s industrial corridor, you were part of this history. And now, you have the right to hold these companies accountable.

Part 2: The Diseases — What Toxic Exposure Does to the Body

Toxic exposure doesn’t cause symptoms immediately. Many diseases take 10, 20, 30, or even 50 years to develop. Here’s what to watch for — and what it means for your legal case.

1. Mesothelioma (Asbestos Exposure) — The Signature Industrial Disease

What it is: A rare, aggressive cancer of the mesothelium (the lining of the lungs, abdomen, heart, or testicles). 90% of mesothelioma cases are caused by asbestos exposure.

Where City of Beasley workers were exposed:

  • Refineries (asbestos insulation on pipes, boilers, vessels)
  • Shipyards (asbestos lagging, gaskets, fireproofing)
  • Construction (asbestos in drywall, joint compound, flooring, roofing)
  • Power plants (asbestos in turbines, boilers, electrical insulation)
  • Railroads (asbestos in brake shoes, locomotive insulation)

Symptoms (appear 15-50 years after exposure):

  • Pleural mesothelioma (lungs): Chest pain, shortness of breath, persistent dry cough, fluid buildup in the chest
  • Peritoneal mesothelioma (abdomen): Abdominal swelling, nausea, unexplained weight loss, bowel changes
  • Pericardial mesothelioma (heart): Chest pain, irregular heartbeat, difficulty breathing

Prognosis:

  • Median survival: 12-21 months
  • 5-year survival rate: ~10%
  • Treatment: Surgery (pleurectomy/decortication or extrapleural pneumonectomy), chemotherapy (pemetrexed + cisplatin), immunotherapy (nivolumab + ipilimumab), radiation

Legal reality:

  • Asbestos trust funds have paid out $30+ billion to victims.
  • The Manville Trust (Johns-Manville) pays ~5% of approved claims (down from 100% at inception).
  • Verdicts can exceed $100 million (e.g., $2.055 billion in Pilliod v. Monsanto, later reduced).
  • Every fiber counts — you don’t need to prove which specific product caused your disease, only that asbestos was a substantial factor.

2. Leukemia & Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS) — Benzene’s Deadly Legacy

What it is: Cancer of the blood and bone marrow. Benzene is the #1 cause of occupational leukemia.

Where City of Beasley workers were exposed:

  • Refineries (benzene in crude oil processing, reforming units)
  • Chemical plants (benzene as a raw material for plastics, detergents, pesticides)
  • Gasoline handling (fuel truck drivers, gas station attendants)
  • Maritime workers (benzene in crude oil tankers)

Symptoms (appear 5-30 years after exposure):

  • Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML): Fatigue, frequent infections, easy bruising, nosebleeds, weight loss
  • Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS): Anemia (low red blood cells), leukopenia (low white blood cells), thrombocytopenia (low platelets)
  • Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML): Fatigue, night sweats, weight loss, abdominal fullness

Prognosis:

  • AML (benzene-related): 5-year survival rate ~28%
  • MDS: 30-40% progress to AML; median survival 6 months to 3 years
  • Treatment: Chemotherapy (daunorubicin + cytarabine), bone marrow transplant, targeted therapy

Legal reality:

  • ExxonMobil was hit with a $725 million benzene verdict (2024, New Hampshire).
  • Refinery workers with 10+ years of exposure have 2-5x higher leukemia risk.
  • OSHA’s benzene PEL is 1 ppm — but workers were exposed at 10-100x this level for decades.

3. Silicosis — The “New Asbestos” in Construction & Manufacturing

What it is: A progressive, incurable lung disease caused by inhaling crystalline silica dust. Accelerated silicosis can be fatal within 5 years.

Where City of Beasley workers were exposed:

  • Construction (cutting concrete, brick, stone, tile)
  • Fracking & oilfield work (silica sand used in hydraulic fracturing)
  • Foundries & manufacturing (sandblasting, pottery, glassmaking)
  • Demolition & renovation (disturbing silica-containing materials)

Symptoms (appear 5-20 years after exposure):

  • Chronic silicosis: Shortness of breath, chronic cough, fatigue
  • Accelerated silicosis: Rapid progression, severe shortness of breath, respiratory failure
  • Acute silicosis: Develops within weeks/months, often fatal

Prognosis:

  • No cure — progressive and irreversible.
  • Increases lung cancer risk 5x.
  • Accelerated silicosis can require a lung transplant (e.g., 34-year-old stone fabricator in California awarded $52.4 million in 2024).

Legal reality:

  • OSHA’s silica PEL is 50 µg/m³ — but workers were exposed at 10-100x this level.
  • Engineered stone countertop workers are developing accelerated silicosis at alarming rates.
  • Workers’ comp often denies claims — but third-party lawsuits against manufacturers can recover millions.

4. PFAS (“Forever Chemicals”) — The Invisible Contaminant in City of Beasley’s Water & Workplaces

What it is: A class of 14,000+ synthetic chemicals that never break down in the environment or the human body. Linked to cancer, liver disease, thyroid disease, and immune suppression.

Where City of Beasley workers & residents were exposed:

  • Firefighters & military personnel (AFFF firefighting foam used at Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base)
  • Chemical plant workers (PFAS used in non-stick coatings, waterproofing, food packaging)
  • Landfill & waste management workers (PFAS in industrial waste)
  • Drinking water contamination (PFAS detected in Fort Bend County water supplies near industrial sites)

Symptoms (appear 10-30 years after exposure):

  • Kidney cancer (strongest link)
  • Testicular cancer
  • Thyroid disease (hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism)
  • High cholesterol & metabolic syndrome
  • Pregnancy complications (preeclampsia, low birth weight)

Prognosis:

  • PFAS bioaccumulates — levels increase over time in your blood.
  • No safe level — EPA’s MCL is 4 ppt (parts per trillion), but many contaminated sites test at 100-10,000+ ppt.

Legal reality:

  • 3M settled PFAS water contamination claims for $12.5 billion (2023).
  • DuPont/Chemours settled for $1.18 billion (2023).
  • Military bases (including Ellington Field) are major PFAS contamination sites — veterans and families may qualify for VA benefits AND lawsuits.

5. Other Toxic Exposure Diseases in City of Beasley Workers

Disease Linked To Symptoms Latency Period Compensation Pathways
Lung Cancer Asbestos, silica, diesel exhaust, radon Persistent cough, chest pain, weight loss, coughing up blood 10-30 years Asbestos trust funds, FELA (railroad), Jones Act (maritime), lawsuits
Asbestosis Asbestos Shortness of breath, chronic cough, chest tightness 10-40 years Asbestos trust funds, workers’ comp, lawsuits
Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) Benzene, glyphosate (Roundup), PFAS Swollen lymph nodes, fatigue, night sweats, weight loss 5-25 years Roundup lawsuits, benzene claims, PFAS contamination claims
Parkinson’s Disease Paraquat (herbicide), manganese (welding fumes) Tremors, stiffness, slow movement, balance problems 10-20 years Paraquat lawsuits, workers’ comp, third-party claims
Liver Cancer Vinyl chloride (PVC manufacturing), PFAS Abdominal pain, jaundice, unexplained weight loss 15-40 years Chemical exposure lawsuits, PFAS claims
Bladder Cancer Benzene, aromatic amines (chemical manufacturing) Blood in urine, frequent urination, pelvic pain 10-30 years Benzene lawsuits, chemical exposure claims
Kidney Disease Lead, cadmium, PFAS Fatigue, swelling in legs, frequent urination 10-30 years PFAS contamination claims, lead exposure lawsuits

Part 3: Who Is Responsible? The Corporate Defendants in City of Beasley

If you worked in City of Beasley’s industrial corridor, you were likely exposed to products from multiple companies — many of which have since filed for bankruptcy to avoid liability. But bankruptcy doesn’t erase your right to compensation. Here are the major defendants and bankruptcy trust funds that may be liable for your exposure:

1. Asbestos Trust Funds — $30+ Billion Still Available

If you were exposed to asbestos in City of Beasley, you may qualify for claims from multiple trust funds. The average mesothelioma victim files claims with 5-10 trusts, recovering $300,000-$1,000,000+.

Trust Fund Parent Company Current Payment % (2026) City of Beasley Relevance
Johns-Manville Johns-Manville Corp. ~5.1% Used in refineries, shipyards, power plants, construction
Pittsburgh Corning Pittsburgh Corning Corp. ~24.5% UNIBESTOS insulation used in refineries, chemical plants, power plants
Owens Corning/Fibreboard Owens Corning ~4.7% Kaylo pipe insulation used in Gulf Coast refineries
W.R. Grace W.R. Grace & Co. Active Zonolite vermiculite (contaminated with tremolite asbestos) used in attic insulation
Babcock & Wilcox Babcock & Wilcox Active Boiler insulation used in power plants, refineries, ships
USG Asbestos PI Settlement Trust U.S. Gypsum Co. ~12.7% Drywall joint compound used in construction
Armstrong World Industries Armstrong World Industries ~10.8% Floor and ceiling tiles used in construction, shipyards
Kaiser Aluminum Kaiser Aluminum ~10.6% Industrial insulation used in refineries, chemical plants
Federal-Mogul Federal-Mogul ~12.2% Brake shoes, gaskets used in railroads, automotive, industrial
Combustion Engineering ABB Ltd. Active Boiler and pipe insulation used in power plants, refineries

Example: A pipefitter at the ExxonMobil Baytown Refinery may have been exposed to asbestos from:

  • Johns-Manville (pipe insulation)
  • Pittsburgh Corning (UNIBESTOS)
  • Owens Corning (Kaylo)
  • Federal-Mogul (gaskets)

Each exposure qualifies for a separate trust fund claim.

2. Benzene & Chemical Exposure — Solvent Defendants Still in Business

If you were exposed to benzene in City of Beasley, you may have claims against:

Company Products/Operations City of Beasley Exposure Sites
ExxonMobil Refinery operations, benzene in gasoline Baytown Refinery (largest in U.S.)
Shell Refinery operations, chemical manufacturing Deer Park Refinery & Chemical Plant
LyondellBasell Petrochemical manufacturing Houston Ship Channel facilities
Valero Refinery operations Texas City Refinery
Dow Chemical Benzene-based chemicals (styrene, cumene) Freeport Chemical Plant
BASF Industrial solvents, pesticides Port Arthur Chemical Plant
Huntsman Petrochemicals, plastics Conroe Chemical Plant
Celanese Acetic acid, industrial chemicals Pasadena Chemical Plant

Example: A refinery worker at Shell Deer Park diagnosed with AML (acute myeloid leukemia) may have claims against:

  • Shell (employer negligence)
  • Benzene product manufacturers (e.g., Dow, ExxonMobil)
  • Third-party contractors (if exposure occurred during turnarounds)

3. PFAS Contamination — The “Forever Chemical” Defendants

If you were exposed to PFAS in City of Beasley, you may have claims against:

Company Products/Operations City of Beasley Exposure Sources
3M AFFF firefighting foam, non-stick coatings Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base, firefighting foam use
DuPont/Chemours Teflon, food packaging, industrial coatings Chemical plants, contaminated water supplies
Dow Chemical Industrial PFAS use Freeport Chemical Plant
BASF PFAS in manufacturing Port Arthur Chemical Plant
Huntsman PFAS in plastics Conroe Chemical Plant

Example: A firefighter at Ellington Field diagnosed with kidney cancer may have claims against:

  • 3M (AFFF firefighting foam)
  • DuPont/Chemours (PFAS contamination)
  • The U.S. government (Camp Lejeune Justice Act if applicable)

4. Industrial Accidents & Explosions — Refinery & Chemical Plant Defendants

If you were injured in a refinery or chemical plant explosion in City of Beasley, you may have claims against:

Company Facility Notable Incidents
ExxonMobil Baytown Refinery $28.59 million verdict (2023) for 2019 explosion
LyondellBasell Houston Ship Channel Multiple OSHA violations, flaring events
Valero Texas City Refinery Ongoing safety violations
Shell Deer Park Refinery 2019 fire (mandatory evacuations)
Marathon Petroleum Galveston Bay Refinery 2020 fire (1 worker killed)
Dow Chemical Freeport Chemical Plant 2021 explosion (multiple injuries)

Example: A worker injured in the 2019 Shell Deer Park fire may have claims against:

  • Shell (employer negligence)
  • Contractors (if third-party negligence contributed)
  • Equipment manufacturers (if defective machinery caused the explosion)

5. Railroad Workers — FELA Defendants

If you worked for a railroad in City of Beasley, you are covered under the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA) — not workers’ comp. You can sue your employer directly.

Railroad Company City of Beasley Operations Exposure Risks
Union Pacific Major freight lines through Fort Bend County Asbestos (brake shoes, insulation), diesel exhaust, creosote
BNSF Railway Freight operations, rail yards Asbestos, benzene, silica, vibration injuries
Kansas City Southern Freight lines, industrial spurs Asbestos, diesel exhaust, chemical transport risks

Example: A Union Pacific conductor diagnosed with mesothelioma may have claims under:

  • FELA (employer negligence)
  • Asbestos trust funds (brake shoe manufacturers)

6. Maritime & Offshore Workers — Jones Act Defendants

If you worked on a vessel (tugboat, barge, oil rig, ship) in or near City of Beasley, you are covered under the Jones Act — which allows you to sue your employer for negligence.

Company Operations Near City of Beasley Exposure Risks
Todd Shipyards Ship repair & construction (Houston) Asbestos (insulation, gaskets), welding fumes
BAE Systems Shipbuilding & repair Asbestos, benzene, confined space hazards
Bollinger Shipyards Offshore vessel construction Asbestos, welding fumes, chemical exposure
ExxonMobil Offshore oil platforms Benzene, asbestos, hydrogen sulfide
Shell Offshore drilling Benzene, asbestos, chemical exposure

Example: A deckhand on a tugboat in the Houston Ship Channel diagnosed with asbestosis may have claims under:

  • Jones Act (employer negligence)
  • Unseaworthiness doctrine (if the vessel was unsafe)
  • Asbestos trust funds (insulation manufacturers)

Part 4: Your Compensation Pathways — How Much You Could Recover

Toxic exposure cases are not one-size-fits-all. Depending on your situation, you may qualify for multiple compensation pathways simultaneously. Here’s what you could recover:

1. Asbestos Trust Fund Claims — $50,000 to $1,000,000+

  • Average claim: $41,000 per trust
  • Typical mesothelioma victim: Files with 5-10 trusts, recovering $300,000-$1,000,000+
  • Time to payment: 3-12 months (expedited review for terminal patients)
  • Approval rate: ~92% when properly documented

Example: A City of Beasley pipefitter diagnosed with mesothelioma could recover:

  • Johns-Manville Trust: $50,000
  • Pittsburgh Corning Trust: $100,000
  • Owens Corning Trust: $30,000
  • Combustion Engineering Trust: $80,000
  • Federal-Mogul Trust: $60,000
  • Total: $320,000+ from trust funds alone

2. Personal Injury & Wrongful Death Lawsuits — $1,000,000 to $100,000,000+

Case Type Average Settlement Range Landmark Verdicts Key Factors
Mesothelioma $1,000,000 – $10,000,000 $2.055 billion (Pilliod v. Monsanto) Defendant identification, exposure history, diagnosis stage
Benzene/AML $500,000 – $20,000,000 $725 million (ExxonMobil, 2024) Exposure duration, employer knowledge, medical documentation
Silicosis $250,000 – $10,000,000 $52.4 million (California stone fabricator, 2024) Disease progression, employer negligence, PPE failures
PFAS Contamination $50,000 – $500,000 (individual) $12.5 billion (3M settlement, 2023) Blood PFAS levels, diagnosed condition, proximity to contamination
Refinery Explosion $2,000,000 – $50,000,000 $2.1 billion (BP Texas City, 2005) OSHA violations, injury severity, corporate negligence
Construction Accident (Fall/Scaffold) $500,000 – $10,000,000 $860 million (Dallas crane collapse, 2024) OSHA violations, third-party liability, injury permanence
Jones Act (Maritime Injury) $500,000 – $10,000,000 $17.5 million (petroleum inspector, benzene exposure) Seaman status, vessel negligence, unseaworthiness
FELA (Railroad Injury) $500,000 – $20,000,000 $15 million (Indiana conductor, 2024) Railroad negligence, injury severity, lost earning capacity
Trench Collapse (Fatal) $2,000,000 – $10,000,000 $20 million (Bronx trench collapse) OSHA excavation violations, employer negligence
Electrocution (High Voltage) $1,000,000 – $15,000,000 $30 million (Texas construction) Voltage level, LOTO compliance, employer negligence

3. Government Programs — Additional Compensation

Program Eligibility Compensation Amount Filing Deadline
Camp Lejeune Justice Act (CLJA) Lived/worked at Camp Lejeune 1953-1987 $150,000 – $450,000+ August 10, 2024 (but extensions possible)
Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) Uranium miners, downwinders, nuclear test participants $50,000 – $150,000 December 31, 2027 (extended in 2025)
EEOICPA (Energy Employees) DOE nuclear weapons workers $150,000 – $400,000+ No deadline
VA Disability Benefits Veterans with service-connected exposure $3,600 – $45,000+/year No deadline
Workers’ Compensation (Texas) Workers injured on the job $50,000 – $500,000+ 1 year from injury (30 days to report)

Example: A veteran who worked at Ellington Field and was exposed to PFAS in firefighting foam may qualify for:

  • VA disability benefits ($3,600+/year)
  • PFAS contamination lawsuit ($100,000-$500,000)
  • Camp Lejeune Justice Act claim (if they lived on base)

4. The Multi-Pathway Strategy — How Attorney 911 Maximizes Your Recovery

Most law firms pursue ONE pathway. We pursue ALL available pathways simultaneously — because every dollar counts.

Example: A City of Beasley refinery worker diagnosed with mesothelioma from asbestos and AML from benzene exposure could recover from:
Asbestos trust funds ($300,000-$1,000,000)
Benzene personal injury lawsuit ($1,000,000-$10,000,000)
Workers’ compensation ($100,000-$500,000)
Third-party claims against contractors ($500,000-$5,000,000)
Total potential recovery: $1,900,000 – $16,500,000+

Example: A City of Beasley construction worker who fell from a scaffold and was later diagnosed with silicosis could recover from:
Workers’ compensation ($100,000-$300,000)
Third-party lawsuit against general contractor ($1,000,000-$10,000,000)
Silicosis personal injury lawsuit ($500,000-$5,000,000)
Total potential recovery: $1,600,000 – $15,300,000+

This is why you need Attorney 911. We don’t just file one claim — we build a multi-front legal attack to get you every dollar you deserve.

Part 5: Why You Need an Attorney NOW — The Evidence Is Disappearing

1. Trust Funds Are Depleting — Every Year You Wait Means Less Money

  • The Manville Trust paid 100% of approved claims when it was established in 1988.
  • Today, it pays ~5%.
  • Kaiser Aluminum Trust reduced its payment percentage from 15.5% to 10.6% in May 2025.
  • Armstrong World Industries Trust reduced its payment percentage in March 2025.

If you qualify for trust fund claims, the time to file is NOW.

2. Evidence Is Being Destroyed — Every Day You Wait Makes Your Case Harder

Timeframe What Disappears
Week 1-4 Co-worker witnesses are still locatable, memories are fresh
Month 1-6 Employers begin “routine” document purges, co-workers retire/move
Year 1-3 Buildings are demolished, facilities close, witnesses die
Year 3-10 Corporate defendants file bankruptcy, payment percentages decline
Year 10+ Original employers no longer exist, product identification becomes impossible

Example: A City of Beasley shipyard worker exposed to asbestos in the 1970s-1980s may have:

  • Co-workers who can confirm exposure conditions (but they’re elderly and may pass away soon)
  • Employment records (but the shipyard may have closed and records may be lost)
  • Product identification (but the asbestos-containing materials may no longer exist)

We preserve evidence IMMEDIATELY. Within days of retention, we send spoliation demands to:

  • Employers (employment records, OSHA logs, industrial hygiene data)
  • Product manufacturers (safety data sheets, internal studies, warning labels)
  • Property owners (building surveys, asbestos inspection reports)
  • Union locals (membership records, work assignment records)
  • Government agencies (OSHA inspection records, EPA Superfund records)

3. Statutes of Limitations Are Running — The Clock Starts at Diagnosis, Not Exposure

Texas follows the “discovery rule” for toxic exposure cases. The statute of limitations doesn’t start when you were exposed — it starts when you knew or should have known that your disease was caused by the exposure.

Disease Typical Latency Period Statute of Limitations (Texas)
Mesothelioma 15-50 years 2 years from diagnosis
Asbestosis 10-40 years 2 years from diagnosis
Benzene/AML 5-30 years 2 years from diagnosis
Silicosis 5-20 years 2 years from diagnosis
PFAS-related cancer 10-30 years 2 years from diagnosis

But there’s a catch: Some states have statutes of repose — an absolute deadline that runs from the date of exposure, regardless of when you were diagnosed.

Example: A City of Beasley refinery worker exposed to benzene in 1990 and diagnosed with AML in 2025 may still have time to file — but if they wait until 2027, it may be too late.

Don’t assume it’s too late. Let us check your deadlines — for free.

4. Corporate Defendants Are Using Every Trick to Deny Your Claim

When you file a toxic exposure claim, you’re not just fighting a company — you’re fighting their entire legal team. Here’s what they’ll try:

Defense Tactic How They Use It How Attorney 911 Counters It
“You can’t prove which product caused your disease” Argue that you were exposed to multiple products Use the “substantial factor” test — you don’t need to prove which specific product, only that asbestos/benzene was a substantial factor in your disease
“The statute of limitations has expired” Argue that the clock started when you were exposed Use the discovery rule — the clock starts at diagnosis, not exposure
“Workers’ comp is your only remedy” Argue that you can’t sue your employer File third-party claims against product manufacturers, property owners, and contractors
“Our company didn’t exist when the exposure occurred” Argue that successor corporations aren’t liable Use successor liability doctrines (product line, continuity of enterprise) and bankruptcy trust claims
“We complied with OSHA standards” Argue that they followed the law Prove that compliance ≠ safety — OSHA PELs are not “safe” levels (e.g., benzene at 1 ppm still causes leukemia)
“You smoked / had pre-existing conditions” Blame your lifestyle Prove synergistic effects (e.g., asbestos + smoking = 50x lung cancer risk) and occupational causation
“You can’t prove general causation” Hire “experts” to say the toxin doesn’t cause disease Retain board-certified toxicologists, epidemiologists, and occupational medicine physicians to destroy defense “junk science”
“The government contractor defense protects us” Argue that they followed government specs Prove that the government didn’t require the specific toxic material (e.g., contractors chose asbestos because it was cheap)

Lupe Peña used to work for the defense. He knows every trick they’ll try — because he helped develop them. Now, he uses that knowledge to fight for you.

Part 6: What to Do Next — Your Action Plan

Step 1: Get the Right Medical Evaluation

If you suspect toxic exposure, see a specialist immediately. The right diagnosis can save your life and your case.

Disease Specialist to See Nearest Top Centers in Texas
Mesothelioma Thoracic oncologist, pulmonologist MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston) — #1 cancer hospital in the U.S.
Asbestosis Pulmonologist UTHealth Houston Pulmonary Medicine
Leukemia/AML Hematologist/oncologist MD Anderson Leukemia Center (Houston) — largest leukemia program in the world
Silicosis Pulmonologist, occupational medicine specialist UT Southwestern Medical Center (Dallas)
PFAS-related illness Endocrinologist, oncologist Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center (Houston)
Lung Cancer Thoracic oncologist MD Anderson Lung Cancer Program
Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Hematologist/oncologist MD Anderson Lymphoma Program

Pro Tip: Ask your doctor to document your exposure history in your medical records. This creates powerful evidence for your case.

Step 2: Preserve Evidence — Before It’s Too Late

Within 14 days of contacting Attorney 911, we send spoliation demands to:
Your employer (employment records, OSHA logs, industrial hygiene data)
Product manufacturers (safety data sheets, internal studies, warning labels)
Property owners (building surveys, asbestos inspection reports)
Union locals (membership records, work assignment records)
Government agencies (OSHA inspection records, EPA Superfund records)

What you can do NOW:

  • Write down your work history (every job, every employer, every product you handled)
  • Gather medical records (diagnosis reports, imaging studies, pathology reports)
  • Identify co-workers (names, contact info, what they remember about your exposure)
  • Take photos (of your workplace, safety equipment, hazardous conditions)
  • Save pay stubs & union records (proof of employment and exposure duration)

Step 3: File Your Claims — Before Deadlines Expire

We file ALL available claims simultaneously:

Claim Type What We File Timeframe
Asbestos Trust Funds Claims with every eligible trust (5-10+ trusts) 30-90 days
Personal Injury Lawsuit Lawsuit against solvent defendants (employers, manufacturers) 60-180 days
Workers’ Compensation Workers’ comp claim (if applicable) 30 days to report, 1 year to file
VA Disability Benefits VA disability claim (if veteran) No deadline
FELA Claim FELA lawsuit (if railroad worker) 3 years from diagnosis
Jones Act Claim Jones Act lawsuit (if maritime worker) 3 years from injury
Camp Lejeune Claim CLJA lawsuit (if eligible) August 10, 2024 deadline (but extensions possible)
RECA Claim RECA application (if uranium miner/downwinder) December 31, 2027 deadline

Step 4: Fight for Maximum Compensation

We don’t just file claims — we fight for every dollar you deserve.

Phase What We Do Timeframe
Phase 1: Immediate Triage (Days 1-14) Exposure history interview, medical records review, trust fund screening, statute of limitations analysis 2 weeks
Phase 2: Evidence Capture (Days 14-60) Spoliation demands, subpoenas for OSHA records, co-worker identification, product research, site inspection 6 weeks
Phase 3: Expert Development (Days 30-120) Retain medical experts, industrial hygienists, epidemiologists, corporate knowledge experts 3-4 months
Phase 4: Multi-Front Litigation (Day 60+) File trust fund claims, lawsuit against solvent defendants, workers’ comp, VA benefits, FELA/Jones Act claims Ongoing

Part 7: Why Choose Attorney 911 for Your Toxic Exposure Case?

1. We Have Insider Knowledge — Because We Used to Work for the Other Side

  • Lupe Peña was an insurance defense attorney who evaluated toxic exposure claims for the corporations.
  • He knows exactly how they build their defense — because he helped build it.
  • Now, he uses that knowledge to fight against them.

As one client wrote in their Google review:

“Lupe Peña used to evaluate toxic exposure claims FOR the corporations. Now he evaluates them AGAINST them. That switch changes outcomes.”

2. We’ve Litigated the Biggest Industrial Cases in Texas History

  • Ralph Manginello was part of the legal team in the BP Texas City Refinery explosion ($2.1 billion total case) — one of the deadliest industrial disasters in U.S. history.
  • We’ve fought ExxonMobil, Shell, Dow Chemical, and other corporate giants — and won.
  • We know how to take on billion-dollar corporations — and make them pay.

As another client wrote:

“Ralph Manginello took on BP — and won. If he can take on BP, he can take on the company that poisoned you.”

3. We Don’t Just Handle Toxic Exposure — We Specialize in It

  • Most personal injury firms dabble in toxic exposure cases.
  • We focus on them.
  • We understand the science, the regulations, and the corporate tactics better than anyone.

Our toxic exposure practice includes:
Mesothelioma & asbestos exposure (trust funds, lawsuits, veterans)
Benzene & chemical exposure (refinery workers, chemical plant workers)
PFAS contamination (firefighters, military, contaminated water)
Silicosis & occupational lung disease (construction, fracking, manufacturing)
Camp Lejeune water contamination (military, veterans, families)
Roundup & pesticide exposure (farm workers, landscapers)
Industrial explosions & refinery accidents (OSHA violations, corporate negligence)
Jones Act & maritime injuries (offshore workers, shipyard workers)
FELA & railroad injuries (railroad workers, asbestos exposure)

4. We Pursue Every Available Pathway — Not Just One

  • Most firms file one claim and call it a day.
  • We file ALL available claims simultaneously — trust funds, lawsuits, workers’ comp, VA benefits, government programs.
  • We maximize your total recovery.

Example: A City of Beasley refinery worker with mesothelioma and AML could recover from:
Asbestos trust funds ($300,000-$1,000,000)
Benzene personal injury lawsuit ($1,000,000-$10,000,000)
Workers’ compensation ($100,000-$500,000)
Third-party claims against contractors ($500,000-$5,000,000)
Total potential recovery: $1,900,000 – $16,500,000+

5. We Treat You Like Family — Not a Case Number

  • Mass tort firms sign up thousands of clients and disappear.
  • We keep our caseload small so we can give you personal attention.
  • Ralph Manginello gives every client his cell phone number.
  • We answer your calls, return your emails, and keep you updated.

As one client wrote:

“I never felt like just another case. They treated me like family.”

6. We Work on Contingency — You Pay Nothing Unless We Win

  • No upfront fees.
  • No hourly charges.
  • No hidden costs.
  • We advance all case expenses (medical records, expert witnesses, court fees).
  • If we don’t win, you owe us nothing.

As another client wrote:

“They took all the financial stress off my shoulders. I didn’t have to worry about paying for a lawyer — they only got paid if I won.”

Part 8: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

1. I was exposed decades ago — is it too late to file a claim?

No. Texas follows the discovery rule — the statute of limitations starts when you knew or should have known that your disease was caused by the exposure, not when the exposure occurred.

  • Mesothelioma diagnosed in 2026 from 1985 exposure? The clock started at diagnosis.
  • AML diagnosed in 2025 from 1990 benzene exposure? The clock started at diagnosis.
  • Silicosis diagnosed in 2024 from 2000 construction work? The clock started at diagnosis.

But don’t wait. Evidence is disappearing, trust funds are depleting, and witnesses are dying.

2. I already filed for workers’ comp — can I still sue?

Yes. Workers’ compensation is not your only option.

  • Workers’ comp caps your recovery and doesn’t cover pain and suffering.
  • You can also file third-party claims against:
    • Product manufacturers (asbestos, benzene, silica, PFAS)
    • Property owners (if you were exposed at a site you didn’t own)
    • General contractors (if you were a subcontractor)
    • Equipment suppliers (if defective equipment caused your exposure)

Example: A City of Beasley construction worker who fell from a scaffold and was later diagnosed with silicosis could recover from:
Workers’ compensation ($100,000-$300,000)
Third-party lawsuit against the general contractor ($1,000,000-$10,000,000)
Silicosis personal injury lawsuit against the tool manufacturer ($500,000-$5,000,000)

3. The company that exposed me is bankrupt — can I still get compensation?

Yes. Many companies that exposed workers to asbestos, benzene, and other toxins have filed for bankruptcy — but bankruptcy doesn’t erase your right to compensation.

  • Asbestos trust funds hold $30+ billion for victims.
  • The average mesothelioma victim files claims with 5-10 trusts, recovering $300,000-$1,000,000+.
  • We identify every trust fund you qualify for and file claims with all of them.

Example: A City of Beasley pipefitter diagnosed with mesothelioma could recover from:

  • Johns-Manville Trust: $50,000
  • Pittsburgh Corning Trust: $100,000
  • Owens Corning Trust: $30,000
  • Combustion Engineering Trust: $80,000
  • Federal-Mogul Trust: $60,000
  • Total: $320,000+ from trust funds alone

4. I’m a veteran — how does this affect my VA benefits?

Your VA benefits and toxic exposure claims are separate.

  • VA disability benefits are for service-connected disabilities.
  • Toxic exposure lawsuits are against corporate defendants (e.g., asbestos manufacturers, chemical companies).
  • Camp Lejeune Justice Act claims are against the U.S. government.
  • You can receive VA benefits AND pursue a lawsuit or trust fund claim.

Example: A veteran exposed to asbestos at Ellington Field could recover from:
VA disability benefits ($3,600+/year)
Asbestos trust funds ($300,000-$1,000,000)
Camp Lejeune Justice Act claim (if they lived on base)

5. I’m undocumented — can I still file a claim?

Yes. Your immigration status does NOT affect your right to compensation.

  • Federal law protects ALL workers, regardless of immigration status.
  • You cannot be deported for filing a toxic exposure claim.
  • Hablamos español. Lupe Peña is bilingual, and we have Spanish-speaking staff.

As one client wrote:

“They helped me even though I was undocumented. They treated me with respect and fought for me.”

6. How much is my case worth?

Every case is different, but here are the typical ranges for City of Beasley toxic exposure cases:

Case Type Average Settlement Range Landmark Verdicts
Mesothelioma $1,000,000 – $10,000,000 $2.055 billion (Pilliod v. Monsanto)
Benzene/AML $500,000 – $20,000,000 $725 million (ExxonMobil, 2024)
Silicosis $250,000 – $10,000,000 $52.4 million (California stone fabricator, 2024)
PFAS Contamination $50,000 – $500,000 (individual) $12.5 billion (3M settlement, 2023)
Refinery Explosion $2,000,000 – $50,000,000 $2.1 billion (BP Texas City, 2005)
Construction Accident (Fall/Scaffold) $500,000 – $10,000,000 $860 million (Dallas crane collapse, 2024)
Jones Act (Maritime Injury) $500,000 – $10,000,000 $17.5 million (petroleum inspector, benzene exposure)
FELA (Railroad Injury) $500,000 – $20,000,000 $15 million (Indiana conductor, 2024)

The value of your case depends on:
The severity of your disease
The strength of your exposure evidence
The number of defendants you can sue
The available insurance and assets

We evaluate your case for free — and tell you exactly what it’s worth.

7. How long will my case take?

It depends on the type of case:

Case Type Typical Timeline Factors That Affect Timeline
Asbestos Trust Fund Claims 3-12 months Number of trusts, expedited vs. individual review
Mesothelioma Lawsuit 6-18 months Defendant cooperation, trial date
Benzene/AML Lawsuit 12-24 months Number of defendants, expert testimony
Silicosis Lawsuit 12-36 months Disease progression, employer negligence
PFAS Contamination Lawsuit 2-5 years Mass tort MDL process, bellwether trials
Camp Lejeune Claim 3-5 years Government claims process, litigation
Refinery Explosion Lawsuit 12-36 months OSHA violations, injury severity
Jones Act/FELA Claim 6-18 months Employer cooperation, trial date

We move as fast as possible — but we never rush your case. We fight for maximum compensation, not fast settlements.

8. What if I don’t know which products I was exposed to?

That’s our job. We reconstruct your work history using:
Employment records (pay stubs, union records, job assignments)
Co-worker testimony (affidavits from people who worked with you)
Product databases (asbestos product identification, benzene-containing chemicals)
Industrial hygiene reports (air sampling data from your workplace)
OSHA inspection records (violations at your worksite)

Example: A City of Beasley refinery worker who doesn’t remember which pipes had asbestos insulation can still file claims against:

  • Johns-Manville (pipe insulation)
  • Pittsburgh Corning (UNIBESTOS)
  • Owens Corning (Kaylo)
  • Combustion Engineering (boiler insulation)

We don’t need you to remember every detail — we do the detective work for you.

9. Can family members file a claim if a loved one died from toxic exposure?

Yes. If a loved one died from mesothelioma, leukemia, lung cancer, or another occupational disease, family members may have two separate claims:

  1. Wrongful Death Claim — For the family’s losses (loss of companionship, financial support, funeral expenses).
  2. Survival Action — For the victim’s pain and suffering, medical bills, and lost wages before death.

Example: If a City of Beasley refinery worker died from mesothelioma, their spouse could recover from:
Wrongful death claim ($1,000,000-$10,000,000)
Survival action ($500,000-$5,000,000)
Asbestos trust funds ($300,000-$1,000,000)
Total potential recovery: $1,800,000 – $16,000,000+

10. What if I was exposed to multiple toxins?

You may have multiple claims.

Example: A City of Beasley refinery worker exposed to asbestos and benzene could have:
Mesothelioma claim (asbestos)
AML claim (benzene)
Asbestos trust fund claims ($300,000-$1,000,000)
Benzene personal injury lawsuit ($1,000,000-$10,000,000)
Workers’ compensation ($100,000-$500,000)
Total potential recovery: $1,400,000 – $11,500,000+

We identify ALL of your exposure pathways and pursue ALL available compensation.

Part 9: Your Next Steps — Time Is Running Out

1. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 Now for a Free Consultation

  • No obligation.
  • No upfront fees.
  • We answer 24/7.

2. Get a Free Case Evaluation

  • We’ll review your work history, medical records, and exposure evidence.
  • We’ll tell you exactly what your case is worth.
  • We’ll explain every compensation pathway you qualify for.

3. Let Us Fight for You

  • We’ll preserve evidence before it disappears.
  • We’ll file your claims before deadlines expire.
  • We’ll fight for maximum compensation — no shortcuts, no settlements for less than you deserve.

Final Words — You Deserve Justice

You spent your career building this country. You worked in refineries, chemical plants, construction sites, railroads, and shipyards — often in dangerous conditions with no warnings about the toxins you were breathing.

The companies that exposed you knew the risks. They had the studies. They suppressed the research. They chose profits over your health.

Now, they’re counting on you to do nothing.

Don’t let them get away with it.

Call 1-888-ATTY-911 now. The consultation is free, and you pay nothing unless we win.

You have rights. You have options. You have a team that will fight for you.

Attorney 911 — Your Legal Emergency Response Team

📞 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
🌐 www.attorney911.com
📍 Serving City of Beasley, Fort Bend County, and All of Texas

We don’t just handle toxic exposure cases — we win them.

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