Comanche County Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injury Justice
You go to work every day in Comanche County to provide for your family. You might be a farmer in De Leon, a construction contractor in Comanche, or a worker who commutes to the power plants and manufacturing hubs that drive the Texas economy. For decades, you trusted that the dust you breathed and the chemicals you handled were just part of a hard day’s work. You didn’t know that the companies that manufactured those products—the multi-billion dollar corporations that profit from your labor—knew their products were killing you. They had the studies. They had the warnings from their own doctors. And they chose to stay silent while you breathed in the poison.
Now, you have a cough that won’t go away. You have shortness of breath that keeps you from enjoying a Saturday at Proctor Lake. Or worse, you’ve just received a diagnosis that feels like a death sentence: mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia, or non-Hodgkin lymphoma. At Attorney 911, we know this isn’t just “bad luck.” It is the biological result of corporate greed. Whether you were exposed in the agricultural fields of Gustine, a renovation project in downtown Comanche, or at a regional industrial site, you have legal rights that most people don’t even know exist. We are here to help you discover the truth and hold every responsible party accountable.
The Authority You Need Against Corporate Giants
When you are fighting a Fortune 500 company, you cannot rely on an attorney who treats your case like a simple car accident. Toxic exposure litigation is a war of science, documents, and endurance. We bring a nuclear advantage to that fight. Our founding attorney, Ralph Manginello, has spent 27+ years in the courtroom holding some of the largest corporations in the world accountable. Ralph was part of the litigation team in the BP Texas City Refinery explosion—a $2.1 billion total case. He understands the mechanics of industrial disasters and the systemic safety failures that cause them.
Furthermore, we offer an insider perspective that no other firm in Comanche County can provide. Our team includes Lupe Peña, a former insurance defense attorney. Lupe spent years inside the machine, learning exactly how insurance companies and corporate law firms evaluate, suppress, and deny toxic exposure claims. He knows the playbook they use to tell a sick worker that their illness was caused by “lifestyle choices” or “aging” rather than the chemicals they handled for thirty years. Today, Lupe uses that classified information to destroy their defenses.
We are not a mass tort referral mill. When you call 1-888-ATTY-911, you are speaking to a team admitted to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, prepared to take your case from the initial investigation all the way to a jury verdict. We maintain a 4.9-star rating across 272+ verified Google reviews because we treat our clients like the neighbors they are, not just file numbers. As one of our clients, Stephanie H., shared in her review: “I just really made me feel like I mattered throughout the entire process.” This philosophy is why we provide Ralph’s personal cell phone number to our clients—because in a legal emergency, you need a lawyer, not a voicemail.
Mesothelioma and Asbestos: The Heavy Toll on Comanche County Workers
Asbestos is the only known cause of mesothelioma, a terminal cancer of the protective lining of your internal organs. For decades, asbestos was used in virtually every industrial and construction material in Texas. If you worked in building maintenance, automotive repair, or heavy trades in Comanche County, you were likely exposed on a daily basis. The companies that manufactured this “miracle mineral,” such as Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and Pittsburgh Corning, knew it was lethal as early as the 1930s.
The Science of How Asbestos Kills
Asbestos is not a single chemical; it is a mineral that forms microscopic, needle-like fibers. When these fibers—particularly those 5 micrometers or longer—are inhaled, they travel deep into the alveolar regions of the lungs. Because they are chemically indestructible and physically sharp, your body cannot expel them.
Once in the lungs, these fibers penetrate the visceral pleura and lodge in the parietal pleura, the outer lining of the lung cavity. Your immune system’s macrophages attempt to destroy these foreign particles through a process called “frustrated phagocytosis.” Because the fiber is too long for the macrophage to engulf, the immune cell dies, releasing inflammatory cytokines like TNF-alpha and reactive oxygen species (ROS). This creates a localized, permanent state of chronic inflammation. Over a 15-to-50-year latency period, this inflammatory environment causes cumulative DNA damage and deactivates critical tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and p16. The result is the malignant transformation of mesothelial cells into mesothelioma.
Symptoms and Recognition in Comanche County
Many workers in Comanche County dismiss early symptoms as “just getting older” or the result of a lifetime of manual labor. If you have been diagnosed with any of the following, or are experiencing these symptoms after a career in the trades, you must tell your doctor about your asbestos history:
- Persistent dry cough: Often the first sign, starting as a tickle and progressing to a chronic hacking cough.
- Shortness of breath (Dyspnea): Initially only during exertion, like walking the fence line, but eventually occurring even while at rest.
- Chest wall pain: A dull, aching pain that may worsen when you take a deep breath or cough.
- Unexplained weight loss: Losing 10% or more of your body weight without trying.
- Pleural effusions: Fluid buildup around the lungs that requires “tapping” or drainage.
Tracking the Source of Your Exposure
We know that Comanche County doesn’t have a giant shipyard or a massive refinery within its borders, but that didn’t keep asbestos out. We investigate every possible pathway:
- Industrial Commuters: Many residents of Comanche, De Leon, and Gustine have commuted for decades to work at regional power plants like the Comanche Peak Nuclear Power Plant or heavy manufacturing facilities in Abilene and Fort Worth. These sites were saturated with asbestos insulation, boiler lagging, and gaskets.
- Renovation and Demolition: Workers who renovated older homes, schools, or commercial buildings in Comanche County before the 1980s were exposed to asbestos-containing drywall joint compound (often called “mud”), floor tiles, and ceiling panels.
- Automotive Mechanics: Local mechanics in Comanche County auto shops were exposed every time they blew out brake drums or ground down asbestos-containing brake linings manufactured by Ford, Bendix, or Raybestos.
- Secondhand Exposure: We have represented wives and children who never set foot in a factory but were poisoned by the “take-home” dust on a husband or father’s work clothes.
If you’ve been diagnosed, you shouldn’t have to worry about how to pay for treatment. Asbestos bankruptcy trust funds hold approximately $30 billion in remaining assets. These trusts, like the Manville Trust or the Western Asbestos Trust, were established specifically to pay victims like you. Most law firms will only file a single claim. We screen you for eligibility against over 60 active trusts and investigate lawsuits against solvent (non-bankrupt) defendants to maximize your total recovery.
As Ralph Manginello explains in our million-dollar case video, toxic exposure cases routinely meet the criteria for significant compensation—but only if you have an attorney who knows how to preserve the evidence from 30 years ago. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, thorough investigation of your work history and potential trust fund eligibility. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes, but the window to act is narrowing as these trust fund payment percentages continue to decline.
Roundup and Pesticide Exposure: Protecting the Comanche County Agricultural Community
Comanche County is a powerhouse of Texas agriculture, known for its dairy farms, peach orchards, and massive peanut and pecan production. For forty years, the herbicide Roundup, containing glyphosate, has been the standard tool for local farmers and landscapers. Monsanto (now owned by Bayer) marketed Roundup as “safer than table salt.” They were lying.
The Mechanism of Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
Glyphosate is a probable genotoxicant that causes DNA strand breaks and oxidative stress in human cells. While Monsanto long argued that glyphosate targets a pathway that only exists in plants, independent science shows that it disrupts the human gut microbiome and causes profound immune system dysregulation. Specifically, Roundup exposure is linked to the development of Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL).
When you handle Roundup on a Comanche County farm, the chemical and its toxic surfactants enter your body through the skin and lungs. These toxins suppress the activity of T-cells and macrophages, the very cells responsible for identifying and destroying cancer cells in your lymphoid tissues. Over time, clones of malignant B-cells are allowed to proliferate, leading to subtypes like Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) or Follicular Lymphoma.
The Monsanto Papers and Corporate Betrayal
Monsanto didn’t just ignore these risks; they actively worked to conceal them. The “Monsanto Papers,” unsealed through litigation, proved the company ghostwrote scientific studies, pressured regulators, and established a “Let Nothing Go” program to attack any scientist who spoke the truth. This is the kind of corporate betrayal that makes our team fight harder. If you used Roundup regularly for at least two years and have been diagnosed with NHL, your illness wasn’t an accident—it was a predicted outcome of a dangerous product.
Symptom Recognition for Comanche County Farmers
If you work the land in Comanche County and notice the following, seek a consultation with an oncologist immediately:
- Swollen lymph nodes: Painless lumps in your neck, armpits, or groin.
- Night sweats: Soaking through your sheets even in a cool room.
- Persistent fever: A low-grade fever that never quite goes away.
- Abdominal swelling: From an enlarged spleen or liver.
Juries across the country have awarded billions of dollars in Roundup verdicts, including a $2.25 billion verdict in Philadelphia in 2024 and a $2.055 billion verdict in California. While settlements vary based on the specific diagnosis and usage history, the money is real and intended for workers like you. Under the Texas discovery rule, your statute of limitations for a Roundup claim generally begins when you were diagnosed and learned it could be linked to your exposure—not when you first sprayed the chemical.
Attorney Ralph Manginello and our entire team are ready to evaluate your agricultural exposure history. We understand Comanche County’s farming culture, and we believe no farmer should have to trade their life for their livelihood. Call (888) 288-9911 for a confidential, no-obligation consultation. Hablamos Español—Lupe Peña y nuestro equipo bilingüe están listos para ayudar a todos los trabajadores agrícolas de nuestra comunidad.
Benzene: The Invisible Threat in Comanche County Refineries and Fuel Systems
If you were a petroleum inspector, a fuel transport driver, or a worker at any of the regional oil and gas facilities near Comanche County, you have been exposed to benzene. A natural component of crude oil and a byproduct of refinery processes, benzene is one of the most toxic chemicals still used in mass quantities in America.
How Benzene Destroys Your Blood
Benzene does not just make you “sick”—it rewrites your bone marrow at the molecular level. Once inhaled, benzene is metabolized in the liver by the enzyme CYP2E1 into benzene oxide, and eventually into muconaldehyde and p-benzoquinone. These metabolites are directly toxic to the hematopoietic stem cells—the “mother cells” in your bone marrow that produce all your blood cells.
These chemicals cause specific chromosomal translocations, such as t(8;21) and t(15;17), which are biomarkers of benzene-induced leukemia. Chronic exposure can lead to Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS)—a pre-leukemic condition—and Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML). AML is a fast-moving, aggressive cancer that requires immediate, expensive, and debilitating treatment.
Who is at Risk in Comanche County?
Workers in Comanche County who have been exposed include:
- Refinery Operators and Contractors: Many Comanche County residents commute to the massive petrochemical corridors of North and Central Texas.
- Truck Drivers: Any driver hauling gasoline or crude oil who was exposed to vapors during loading and unloading.
- Auto Mechanics and Pipefitters: Exposure to benzene in parts cleaners, solvents, and fuel line repairs.
OSHA’s Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) for benzene is 1 ppm, but we know that many companies ignored these limits for decades. Even worse, the science proves there is NO safe level of benzene exposure. If your blood counts are low (anemia, leukopenia, or thrombocytopenia) and you have a history of working with petroleum products, you may have a legal claim against the companies that manufactured and sold those products.
As Ralph explains in this Attorney 911 video, the value of these cases depends on proving corporate knowledge. Companies like ExxonMobil, Shell, and Chevron knew benzene caused leukemia in the 1960s but continued to put workers in harm’s way. A 2024 Pennsylvania jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil for a mechanic with benzene-related leukemia. That is the kind of accountability we fight for every day.
The Bridge: When Industry and Substance Converge in Comanche County
At Attorney 911, we differentiate ourselves by understanding the “bridge” where professional trades and toxic substances meet. Most firms might handle a “construction fall” or an “asbestos case” separately. We understand the compounded risks that Comanche County workers face.
Construction and Asbestos Convergence
If you are a construction worker in Comanche County—a roofer, an insulator, or a plumber—you have dangerous job-site risks like scaffold falls or trench collapses. At the same time, when you work on older buildings in Comanche, you are inhaling the invisible dust of the past. If you suffer a workplace injury, your employer will tell you that workers’ compensation is your only choice. They are wrong.
If your injury or your toxic exposure was caused by a defective product (like a faulty harness or an asbestos-containing material), you have a “third-party claim.” These claims have NO damage caps and allow you to recover for full pain and suffering, which workers’ comp does not pay. We look for these dual-recovery pathways in every case. As Eddy M. shared in his Google review: “Every question I had was answered… which made everything much less stressful.”
Railroad Workers and Asbestos (FELA)
The railroad industry has deep historical roots in Comanche County, particularly in De Leon. Railroad workers—conductors, engineers, and machine shop workers—were NOT covered by standard workers’ comp. Instead, they are protected by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA). Under FELA, you can sue your employer for negligence, and the burden of proof is much lower than in a standard case.
Railroad workers suffered massive asbestos exposure from locomotive insulation and brake shoes. If you are a railroad retiree in Comanche County diagnosed with lung cancer or mesothelioma, you may be entitled to a FELA negligence claim against the railroad AND multiple trust fund claims against the companies that manufactured the brake parts. We handle these combined FELA/Asbestos bridges to ensure no money is left on the table.
PFAS: The “Forever Chemical” Crisis in Texas Water
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a class of 14,000+ synthetic chemicals characterized by the carbon-fluorine bond—the strongest in organic chemistry. This bond makes them indestructible in the environment and in your body. Because they were used in firefighting foam (AFFF) at airports and military bases, and in manufacturing across Texas, they have contaminated the drinking water of millions.
PFAS bioaccumulates in your blood and liver, disrupting nuclear receptors called PPAR-alpha. This leads to kidney cancer, testicular cancer, thyroid disease, and high cholesterol that is resistant to diet changes. If you lived near a fire training facility or an industrial dump site in or near Comanche County and have these health problems, you may be part of an emerging mass tort against companies like 3M and DuPont. 3M recently agreed to a $12.5 billion settlement for public water systems, but individual personal injury cases are still moving forward. This is a developing area of law; contact us at 1-888-ATTY-911 for the latest information on these “forever chemical” claims.
Why Time is the Enemy in Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injury Cases
As a worker in Comanche County, your instinct is to push through the pain and keep working. But in the legal world, waiting is the fastest way to lose your case. There are three reasons you must call 1-888-ATTY-911 today:
- Deteriorating Evidence: Every time a building is demolished in Comanche County, the asbestos evidence is gone. Every time a facility updates its safety logs, the records of your old exposure are one step closer to being shredded. Companies are only required to keep most safety records for five to seven years. We move to subpoena and preserve those records before they disappear.
- Witness Mortality: Your best witnesses are the co-workers who were in the trenches with you. In toxic exposure cases where the exposure happened 30 years ago, these witnesses are aging. Every year you wait, you lose the people who can testify about the dust in the air and the lack of respirators.
- Depleting Trust Funds: Asbestos bankruptcy trusts are not endless. As more claims are filed, the trusts often reduce their “payment percentage” to ensure money is left for future victims. The Manville Trust once paid 100%; today it pays closer to 5%. Filing your claim now locks you in at current percentages before they drop again.
As Ralph Manginello explains in this podcast episode on the statute of limitations, the law doesn’t wait for your health to improve. In Texas, you generally have only two years from the date you discover your injury to file a claim. If you wait, you could be barred from recovery forever.
Accountability for Industrial Accidents: Taking on the Giants
Beyond toxic exposure, Comanche County workers in heavy industry face the constant threat of catastrophic accidents. Ralph Manginello’s experience in the BP Texas City litigation gives us a unique perspective on these cases. Large industrial facilities are governed by OSHA’s Process Safety Management (PSM) standard (29 CFR 1910.119). These regulations require employers to anticipate and prevent explosions, fires, and chemical releases.
When a crane collapses or a refinery explodes, the company will almost always try to blame “operator error.” They want to shield themselves from liability by blaming a worker who is often too injured to defend themselves. We know how to pierce that defense. By investigating maintenance records, “near-miss” logs, and identifying cost-cutting measures that compromised safety, we show were the true negligence lies. Whether it is a crane collapse in a regional construction site or an electrocution involving high-voltage lines, we fight for full economic and non-economic damages, including medical expenses, lost earning capacity, and physical impairment.
Compensation Pathways: How We Maximize Your Recovery
We do not just look for “a” settlement; we look for EVERY available dollar. Most firms handle one type of claim. At Attorney 911, we pursue the “full stack” of compensation:
| Pathway | What it Covers | Why Pursue it? |
|---|---|---|
| Trust Fund Claims | Asbestos/Bankrupt Defendants | Guaranteed money regardless of legal “fault.” |
| Civil Lawsuits | Solvent Manufacturers & Owners | Full damages, often resulting in million-dollar recoveries. |
| Wrongful Death | Families of Lost Loved Ones | Recovers for funeral costs, loss of companionship, and mental anguish. |
| Third-Party Claims | Outside the Employer Shield | Allows you to bypass workers’ comp caps and get full pain and suffering. |
| VA Benefits | Service-Connected Exposure | Monthly disability pay for veterans (Camp Lejeune/Asbestos). |
| FELA/Jones Act | Specific Industry Rights | Uncapped negligence lawsuits for railroad and maritime workers. |
Every case is different, and we will never promise a specific outcome. However, as Ralph breaks down in our case valuation guide, understanding these multiple pathways is how a “denied workers’ comp claim” becomes a multi-million dollar recovery project.
Dedicated Service for the Comanche County Community
We are proud to serve the people of Comanche County, including those in Comanche, De Leon, Gustine, Energy, and Lamkin. We understand the heritage of this region—from the peanut harvests to the local shops on the courthouse square. We believe that hard work should be rewarded with security, not a disease caused by corporate negligence.
Hablamos Español. Lupe Peña y nuestro equipo bilingüe están comprometidos a servir a la comunidad hispana de Comanche County. Sabemos que muchos trabajadores temen represalias por su estatus migratorio. Le garantizamos que sus derechos legales para recibir compensación por exposición tóxica o accidentes de trabajo están protegidos por la ley federal, sin importar su estatus. Sus conversaciones con nosotros son 100% confidenciales.
We operate strictly on a contingency fee basis. This means you pay $0 upfront. We advance all the costs of your litigation—the expert doctors, the industrial hygienists, the court filings—and we only get paid if we win your case. If we don’t recover money for you, you owe us nothing. It is a risk-free way to take on the multi-billion dollar corporations that hurt you.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Can I file a mesothelioma claim in Comanche County if my exposure was 40 years ago?
Yes. Mesothelioma has a notoriously long latency period, often taking 20 to 50 years to develop. Under the Texas discovery rule, the two-year statute of limitations generally does not begin until you are diagnosed and discover the cause of your illness. If you were exposed at a job site decades ago and are now sick, your claim is likely still valid.
What is the difference between a trust fund claim and a lawsuit?
A trust fund claim is filed against the assets of a company that has already filed for bankruptcy due to its asbestos liability (like Johns-Manville). These claims are administrative and do not require a trial. A lawsuit is filed against “solvent” companies that are still in business. Most victims qualify for BOTH, and we maximize your recovery by pursuing every possible entity.
Can I sue Monsanto for Roundup cancer in 2026?
Yes. Despite Bayer’s attempts to settle these cases globally, new Roundup lawsuits are being filed every day as more workers are diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. If you sprayed Roundup as part of your farm work in Comanche County, you are still eligible to pursue justice for your medical costs and suffering.
My employer says workers’ comp is my only option after my injury. Is that true?
Not necessarily. While workers’ comp generally protects your direct employer from a lawsuit, it does NOT protect third parties. If your injury was caused by a defective machine, an unsafe subcontractor, or a toxic chemical manufactured by another company, you can file a third-party lawsuit. These claims allow you to recover far more than workers’ comp provides.
How much does it cost to hire Attorney 911 for a toxic exposure case?
It costs nothing out of pocket. We work on contingency, meaning our fee is a percentage of the money we recover for you. We advance all case costs, and we are only reimbursed if we win. If there is no recovery, you owe us $0.
Who is eligible for Camp Lejeune water contamination compensation?
Any veteran, family member, or civilian worker who lived or worked at Camp Lejeune for at least 30 days between 1953 and 1987 may be eligible. Even if you were denied VA disability in the past, the Camp Lejeune Justice Act provides a new way to seek significant compensation for cancers, Parkinson’s, and other conditions linked to the base water.
What types of cancers are linked to benzene exposure at refineries?
The primary cancer linked to benzene is Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML). However, benzene is also strongly associated with Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS), Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML), Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, and Multiple Myeloma. If you worked with petroleum products and have a blood cancer, benzene exposure should be investigated.
Can I file a claim if my family member died of a toxic exposure disease?
Yes. We represent many families in “wrongful death” and “survival actions.” These claims allow the spouse, children, or estate of the deceased to recover damages for the suffering the victim endured before death, as well as the loss of support and companionship suffered by the family.
What evidence do I need to prove my asbestos exposure from years ago?
We help you reconstruct your work history. Evidence includes old pay stubs, union records, co-worker affidavits (testimony from people you worked with), and social security earnings statements. We also use massive proprietary databases to identify which asbestos products were present at specific Texas job sites during specific years.
Do I have to go to court for a toxic exposure case?
Most toxic exposure cases and trust fund claims settle without the client ever stepping into a courtroom. While we prepare every case as if it is going to trial to maximize our leverage, our goal is to get you the money you need as efficiently as possible so you can focus on your health.
Is the Comanche Peak Nuclear Power Plant linked to any toxic exposure claims?
We investigate claims for workers at Comanche Peak who were exposed to radiation, asbestos, or industrial chemicals during construction and maintenance. Nuclear workers may be covered under the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act (EEOICPA) or have private civil claims depending on the circumstances of their exposure.
Can I switch to Attorney 911 if I already have another lawyer?
Yes. If your current firm isn’t communicating with you, isn’t returning your calls, or isn’t pursuing all available trust funds, you have the right to change counsel. We frequently take over cases that other firms have neglected and work to get them back on track for a successful resolution.
What is the “discovery rule” in Texas?
The discovery rule is a legal doctrine that applies to illnesses that take a long time to appear. It states that the time limit to file a lawsuit does not begin until the moment the victim knows (or reasonably should know) that they have an injury and that the injury was caused by someone else’s negligence. This is what allows mesothelioma and benzene victims to sue years after their work ended.
How do I know if my water in Comanche County is contaminated with PFAS?
PFAS contamination is often linked to “firefighting foam” use at regional fire training sites, airports, and military bases. If you suspect your well water or municipal water is contaminated, we can help you understand the testing results and determine if industrial runoff from a nearby facility is the source.
What are “punitive damages”?
Punitive damages are intended to punish a defendant for especially bad behavior—like knowingly hiding the fact that their product causes cancer. Juries award these damages to send a message to corporations that they cannot treat Texas workers as expendable. In many toxic tort cases, punitive damages make up the largest portion of the verdict.
How long does a mesothelioma trust fund claim take?
Once the documentation is evidence-ready, some “expedited” trust fund claims can be processed in as little as 90 days. “Individual review” claims, which often result in higher payouts, can take 6 months to a year. Because we file claims with dozens of trusts simultaneously, our clients often see multiple checks arriving over several months.
My doctor says my lung cancer was caused by smoking. Can I still file an asbestos claim?
Yes. Asbestos exposure and smoking have a “synergistic” effect. This means if you were exposed to asbestos AND you smoked, your risk of lung cancer is 50 to 90 times higher than a non-smoker. The asbestos manufacturers are not off the hook just because you smoked; in fact, the science shows their product made your smoking-related risks exponentially worse.
Is there a fee for a consultation?
Never. All consultations at Attorney 911 are 100% free and confidential. Even if we don’t take your case, we will give you our honest assessment and guide you toward the resources you need.
Who is Ralph Manginello?
Ralph is the founder of Attorney 911 and a veteran trial attorney with over 27 years of experience. He is admitted to the Bar in Texas and New York, has a 5.0 Preeminent rating from Martindale-Hubbell, and has recovered tens of millions of dollars for injured clients. When you hire our firm, you get Ralph’s experience and his personal commitment to your fight.
What does “hablamos español” mean for my case?
It means you will never face a language barrier with us. Lupe Peña is a native Spanish speaker who can explain every legal document and strategy to you in your own language. We ensure our Spanish-speaking clients are just as informed and empowered as any other client we represent.
Take the First Step Toward Accountability
You have spent your life working hard and doing what was asked of you. It is not your fault that a corporation decided your life was less important than their stock price. But it is your responsibility now to protect your family’s future. The money recovered in a toxic exposure or industrial injury case can pay for the best medical care, replace your lost income, and provide for your spouse and children after you are gone.
As Ralph Manginello says: “The corporation that poisoned you has a team of lawyers. Now you need one too.” We are ready to be that team. Whether you are at home in Comanche, out in the fields of Gustine, or in a hospital bed in Brownwood or Abilene, we will come to you.
Don’t let the clock run out on your rights. Don’t let the corporate defense teams wait you out. Call Attorney 911 at 1-888-ATTY-911 or (888) 288-9911 today. Your fight is our fight, and we don’t back down.
Attorney 911 | The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC
Principal Office: 1177 W. Loop South, Suite 1600, Houston, TX 77027
Serving Comanche County and all of Texas
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 or 1-888-288-9911
No fee unless we win. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique.