Aransas Pass Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injury Advocacy: Holding Corporations Accountable for Your Health and Your Future
You didn’t know. For twenty years, thirty years, maybe longer, you went to work at the facilities lining the Corpus Christi Ship Channel, did your job, and came home to your family in Aransas Pass. Nobody told you the dust you breathed while maintaining shrimping vessels at Conn Brown Harbor, the chemicals you handled at the nearby refineries in Gregory and Ingleside, or the insulation you cut inside process units would one day try to kill you. You were building the infrastructure of the South Texas coast, a proud member of the Aransas Pass workforce, while a silent clock was ticking inside your body. Now, you’ve received a diagnosis—mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia, or another life-altering condition—and you’ve realized that the companies you worked for knew the risks. They had the studies. They had the data. They chose their profits over your life, and now you have rights that we are here to protect.
There is a specific word for what happened to you. It isn’t bad luck, it isn’t simply the result of genetics or aging, and it isn’t just “part of the job.” It is exposure. For decades, workers across Nueces County and San Patricio County were treated as expendable by the massive corporations driving the Texas Petrochemical Corridor. At Attorney 911, led by Ralph Manginello and backed by the insider intelligence of former insurance defense attorney Lupe Peña, we understand the betrayal you feel. We know Aransas Pass, from the shrimping docks to the heavy industrial gates of the nearby ExxonMobil and Cheniere complexes. We aren’t just lawyers; we are your advocates in a system designed to make you feel powerless. While you focus on your health and your family, we focus on the multi-front legal attack required to secure the compensation you deserve through asbestos trust funds, personal injury lawsuits, and specialized workers’ rights statutes.
The statistics are devastating, but they provide the foundation for your claim. An estimated 27 million American workers were exposed to asbestos between 1940 and 1979, and Aransas Pass, with its deep connections to the maritime and refining industries, has borne a disproportionate share of that burden. In 2024, the maximum OSHA penalty for a serious workplace safety violation—the kind that leads to a fatal fall or a toxic release—is just $16,131. For a billion-dollar energy company operating near Wheeler Avenue or along the Intracoastal Waterway, that isn’t a fine; it’s a line item smaller than their executive lunch budget. This is exactly why civil litigation exists. When the regulatory system fails to protect the people of Aransas Pass, we use the civil courts to force accountability. Call us at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, no-obligation case evaluation. We work on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay us nothing unless we win your case.
The Science of Betrayal: How Asbestos Destroys the Human Body
Asbestos isn’t a single substance; it’s a group of six naturally occurring silicate minerals that were prized by industries in Aransas Pass for their heat resistance and durability. The white asbestos, known as chrysotile, makes up 95% of commercial use, while the needle-like amphibole fibers, including amosite (brown) and crocidolite (blue), are even more lethal. These fibers are microscopic—measures of 0.1 to 10 micrometers—meaning millions of them fit on a single shrimper’s glove or a pipefitter’s sleeve. When you worked near these materials at a local shipyard or process plant, you inhaled them without knowing. They were invisible, odorless, and initially painless.
The biological mechanism of mesothelioma is a story of “frustrated phagocytosis.” When you inhale asbestos fibers, they penetrate deep into your lungs and eventually reach the mesothelium—the thin tissue lining your lungs (pleural) or abdomen (peritoneal). Your body’s immune system sends macrophages to engulf and destroy these foreign particles. However, asbestos fibers are too long and rigid for macrophages to break down. They are “biopersistent,” meaning they stay in your tissue for 40 years or more. As the macrophages die trying to destroy the fiber, they release inflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen species. This creates an environment of chronic inflammation that lasts for decades, slowly damaging your mesothelial cell DNA.
Over a latency period of 15 to 50 years, this accumulated genetic damage causes the deactivation of critical tumor suppressor genes, such as BAP1 and p16. Without these “brakes” on cell growth, the mesothelial cells undergo malignant transformation. This explains why a worker who handled asbestos lagging at a Gregory refinery in 1975 is only now being diagnosed with mesothelioma in 2026. The companies that manufactured these products, like Johns-Manville and Owens Corning, knew about this process as early as the 1930s. They suppressed the research because they were “ichel liable,” as one of their own attorneys put it in a 1933 memo. We cite the science and the internal documents that prove their knowledge to win your case. Attorney Ralph Manginello explains the criteria for high-value cases in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
Mesothelioma and Asbestos-Related Disease in the Coastal Bend
If you are a resident of Aransas Pass, your exposure likely came from one of three pathways: occupational, secondary (take-home), or environmental. For decades, the trade workers of Nueces and San Patricio Counties—the pipefitters, insulators, boilermakers, and maritime mechanics—were the frontline of exposure. You may have worked with “Kaylo” pipe insulation manufactured by Owens-Illinois or “Unibestos” block insulation from Pittsburgh Corning. These products were used throughout the refinery units and aboard the vessels that serviced the offshore industry.
The symptoms of pleural mesothelioma often mimic more common conditions, leading to frequent misdiagnoses in Aransas Pass clinics. Persistent dry cough, shortness of breath during exertion, and chest wall pain are often dismissed as signs of aging or bronchitis. However, if you have a history of asbestos exposure, these are recognition triggers. Diagnostic pathways involve chest X-rays showing pleural effusion followed by CT scans and PET scans to visualize tumor growth. The gold standard is a biopsy with immunohistochemistry staining—testing for calretinin and WT1—to confirm a mesothelioma diagnosis. Stage IV mesothelioma typically carries a median survival of 12 to 21 months, but aggressive multimodal therapy at centers like MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston can extend that window.
It is critical for Aransas Pass families to understand that smoking does NOT cause mesothelioma. If a corporate defense attorney tries to blame your diagnosis on your lifestyle, they are ignoring established medical science. Smoking does, however, multiply the risk of asbestos-related lung cancer by up to 50 times—a synergistic effect that makes the defendant’s negligence even more dangerous. Asbestos-related lung cancer and asbestosis (the scarring of lung tissue) are also compensable conditions. Even if you have “only” been diagnosed with pleural plaques or thickening, this is medical proof that asbestos fibers have reached your lungs, and you may qualify for trust fund compensation. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 to discuss your medical history and exposure record.
Multiple Compensation Pathways: The Attorney 911 Strategy
Most Aransas Pass law firms only look at one way to get you money. At Attorney 911, we pursue the “Full Recovery Stack.” Because the companies that poisoned you were so numerous, you likely have four or five different legal claims operating at the same time. This is how we maximize the value of your case.
- Asbestos Bankruptcy Trust Claims: There are currently more than 60 active trusts holding approximately $30 billion in assets. These funds were established by bankrupt asbestos manufacturers specifically to pay people like you. The Manville Trust, the USG Asbestos Trust, and the Owens Corning Trust are common sources of recovery for Aransas Pass workers. We know the current payment percentages and filing requirements for every trust.
- Civil Lawsuits against Solvent Defendants: Not every asbestos company went bankrupt. Companies like John Crane Inc. and certain international manufacturers are still solvent and can be sued directly in state or federal court for full compensatory and punitive damages. These claims often yield significantly higher payouts than trust funds alone.
- Third-Party Liability and Workers’ Comp: If you were injured at a job site in Ingleside or Gregory, your employer’s workers’ comp might cover some medical bills, but it won’t pay for your pain and suffering. We identify third parties—such as the property owner or the contractor who brought the asbestos onto the site—to file claims that have no damage caps.
- VA Disability and Federal Programs: Aransas Pass has a high population of Navy veterans who were exposed to asbestos aboard warships or at the Corpus Christi Naval Air Station. We help you secure VA service-connected disability while simultaneously pursuing your civil claims. The two do not cancel each other out.
The money is real, but it is depleting. The Manville Trust, for example, has paid over $5 billion but now pays only a fraction of original claim values due to the volume of victims. Getting your claim filed quickly in Aransas Pass is a mathematical necessity. As Beth B. noted in her Google review, “Ralph Manginello took our bogus case and had it dismissed within a WEEK! I have been trying to get that accomplished for over 2 years.” We bring that same speed and aggression to your toxic exposure claim. Learn more about the process in our podcast episode here: https://share.transistor.fm/s/8babce5d
Industrial Explosions and Acute Injury on the Texas Gulf Coast
Aransas Pass is situated in one of the most volatile industrial environments in the world. The cluster of refineries and chemical plants between Corpus Christi and Beaumont has a documented history of process safety failures. Ralph Manginello was part of the litigation team that held BP accountable for the 2005 Texas City Refinery explosion—a $2.1 billion total case that remains a landmark in industrial safety law. We know the mechanisms of these disasters: overfilled splitter towers, pressurized line ruptures from “popcorn polymer” buildup, and the catastrophic failure of lockout/tagout (LOTO) procedures.
When a refinery explodes near Aransas Pass, the injuries are often dual-track. There is the acute trauma—blast wave barotrauma that ruptures eardrums and perforates bowels, and thermal burns that cause muscle necrosis and restrictive scarring. But there is also the toxic release. Inhalation of benzene, hydrogen sulfide, and carbon monoxide during an explosion causes chemical pneumonitis and long-tail neurological damage. OSHA’s Process Safety Management (PSM) standard (29 CFR 1910.119) requires these facilities to anticipate and prevent these exact events. If a plant near Conn Brown Harbor or Gregory fails to conduct proper Process Hazard Analyses, they are negligent per se.
We also represent the community members of Aransas Pass in environmental contamination claims. When a facility releases a vapor cloud or a groundwater plume, your property value and your family’s health are both at risk. We use industrial hygiene experts to model the plume and identify the concentrations you were exposed to. Whether you were a contractor inside the gate or a resident downwind, you deserve a legal team that isn’t afraid to take on the energy giants. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free assessment of your industrial injury claim. Attorney Ralph Manginello discusses million-dollar case criteria on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
The Benzene Connection: AML and the Refinery Workforce
Benzene is the fundamental building block of the petrochemical industry that dominates the Nueces County economy. If you worked as a refinery operator, pipefitter, or tank cleaner near Aransas Pass, you breathed benzene vapor every day. Benzene doesn’t just make you sick; it rewrites your blood at the molecular level. Your liver metabolizes benzene into muconaldehyde, a compound that specifically attacks the hematopoietic stem cells in your bone marrow.
This process triggers a progression from chronic bone marrow suppression to myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and finally to acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Clinical symptoms in Aransas Pass workers often include unusual fatigue, frequent infections, and easy bruising—symptoms that your company doctor may have downplayed for years. Scientific studies have identified specific chromosomal translocations—primarily t(8;21) and t(15;17)—that act as “fingerprints” for benzene-induced leukemia. In 2024, a Pennsylvania jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil for a single benzene/AML case, proving that juries are losing patience with the oil industry’s concealment of these risks.
The OSHA permissible exposure limit (PEL) for benzene was 10 ppm for decades before finally being lowered to 1 ppm in 1987. If you were exposed before this change, your employer may claim they were “in compliance,” but their own internal memos likely prove they knew 10 ppm was lethal. We know how to find those memos. Lupe Peña, our associate attorney and former insurance defense insider, knows exactly where the corporations hide their exposure data and how their insurers try to undervalue blood cancer claims. “Lupe Peña used to build those cases for the other side, so now he knows exactly how to tear them down,” as one client review noted. Hablamos Español. Llame a Lupe Peña al 1-888-ATTY-911 para una consulta gratis. Su estatus migratorio no afecta sus derechos legales.
Maritime Rights and the Jones Act in Aransas Pass
Aransas Pass is “Where the Shrimp is King,” and Conn Brown Harbor is the heartbeat of our coastal economy. But whether you are a master on a shrimping vessel, a deckhand on a tug, or a technician on an offshore platform support vessel, you are a “seaman” under federal law. This gives you protections that far exceed standard Texas workers’ compensation. Under the Jones Act (46 USC § 30104), you have the right to sue your employer directly for negligence.
To qualify for seaman status, you generally must spend at least 30% of your time in service of a vessel. If you are injured in Aransas Pass waters due to an unseaworthy vessel, defective equipment, or an inadequately trained crew, your employer is liable. The Jones Act uses a “featherweight” burden of proof—you only need to show that your employer’s negligence played “any part, however slight,” in causing your injury. You are also entitled to “Maintenance and Cure”—a no-fault daily living allowance and the payment of all medical bills until you reach maximum medical improvement.
Many Aransas Pass maritime workers were also exposed to asbestos and benzene. Older vessels used asbestos in engine room lagging, gaskets, and fire curtains. Tankermen handling crude oil were chronically exposed to benzene. A single maritime injury case can become a multi-front recovery for both the acute injury and the latent occupational disease. Ralph’s comprehensive guide to offshore accident rights is available here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vd_HVPtPf4. If you aren’t being paid maintenance and cure, or if you’ve been told you can’t sue your maritime employer, call us at 1-888-ATTY-911. Join the 270+ clients who rated Attorney 911 4.9 out of 5 stars on Google.
Construction Accidents and Third-Party Liability
The construction boom along Business Hwy 35 and the development of new industrial facilities near Aransas Pass have created a high-risk environment for tradespeople. Construction has the highest fatality rate in Texas, primarily driven by what OSHA calls the “Fatal Four”: falls, struck-by-object, electrocution, and caught-in/between. If you fell from a scaffold at a job site in Nueces County, your employer’s first move was likely to tell you to file for workers’ comp and keep quiet. They didn’t tell you about third-party liability.
If your fall was caused by a defective scaffold erected by a different subcontractor, or if a site owner failed to ensure proper fall protection (29 CFR 1926 Subpart M), you can sue those third parties for full damages. Unlike workers’ comp, a third-party lawsuit has no cap on damages and allows you to recover for physical impairment, disfigurement, and mental anguish. In Aransas Pass, where many construction workers are part of the Hispanic community, we understand the fear of retaliation. Federal law protects you regardless of your status, and we are here to ensure those protections are enforced. As Stephanie H. wrote: “Leonor and her team were beyond amazing!!! She took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders… they made me feel like I mattered throughout the entire process.”
We also represent heavy equipment operators in crane collapse cases and laborers who have survived trench cave-ins. A single cubic yard of Aransas Pass soil weighs as much as a small car; when a trench over five feet deep lacks shoring, it is a death trap. Evidence like employer safety logs, maintenance records, and OSHA 300 logs disappears fast after a construction accident. We move within 24 hours to secure preservation orders before the company can “re-inspect” or “update” the equipment. Call us now at (888) 288-9911.
PFAS: The “Forever Chemical” Threat to Coastal Texas
PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are a class of over 12,000 synthetic chemicals characterized by the carbon-fluorine bond—the strongest in organic chemistry. They are called “forever chemicals” because they do not break down in the Aransas Pass environment or in your blood. In our region, the primary source of PFAS contamination is Aqueous Film-Forming Foam (AFFF) used in firefighting training at local airports, military installations, and industrial facilities.
PFAS bioaccumulate in your liver, kidneys, and blood, leading to kidney cancer, testicular cancer, ulcerative colitis, and thyroid disease. The EPA recently set the maximum contaminant level for PFOA and PFOS in drinking water at just 4 parts per trillion (ppt)—an extraordinarily strict limit that reflects how dangerous these chemicals are even at vanishingly small concentrations. If your well water or municipal supply near Aransas Pass has tested positive for these chemicals, the manufacturers like 3M and DuPont are facing billions in liability.
Firefighters in Aransas Pass and nearby communities face the highest risk. Your turnout gear itself was often treated with PFAS, and you were trained to use AFFF foam for decades without being told it was toxic. Most states, including Texas, now have firefighter cancer presumption laws that acknowledge the connection between your service and these diseases. We help you navigate the AFFF MDL (Multidistrict Litigation) to secure compensation for your medical treatments and your family’s future. The time to file is now, as these national settlement programs are actively enrolling victims. 1-888-ATTY-911.
Radiation and RECA: Protecting the Forgotten Cold War Workers
While not as visible as the refinery industry, Texas has a significant history with nuclear research and radiation-intensive manufacturing. Uranium miners, millers, and ore transporters from the 1942–1990 era—as well as those present at on-site nuclear tests or living downwind—may qualify for the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA). RECA was recently extended and expanded, providing a critical window for eligible Aransas Pass families to secure $50,000 to $150,000 in federal compensation.
Ionizing radiation damages DNA through direct strand breaks and the generation of reactive oxygen species. This leads to a higher-than-average incidence of leukemia, multiple myeloma, and primary cancers of the thyroid, breast, and lung. If you or a loved one worked in the energy or defense industries during the Cold War and are now facing an unexplained cancer diagnosis, radiation may be the cause. We assist with the complex medical dose reconstruction required to prove these claims to the Department of Justice. The RECA window is currently scheduled to close on December 31, 2027—waiting is not a strategy. Contact us today at 1-888-ATTY-911.
Roundup and Pesticide Exposure in South Texas
South Texas agricultural traditions mean that many Aransas Pass residents have a lifetime of exposure to herbicides like Roundup (glyphosate) and paraquat. If you used Roundup regularly for landscaping, brush clearing, or row-crop farming and were diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), you are part of a massive movement for corporate accountability. Internal Monsanto documents, now known as the “Monsanto Papers,” proved the company ghostwrote studies to say Roundup was safe while their own toxicologists were raising alarms.
Juries have repeatedly awarded billions in punitive damages against Monsanto/Bayer because of this concealment. Glyphosate disrupts the gut microbiome and causes oxidative stress in human cells, triggering subtypes of NHL such as Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) and Follicular Lymphoma. Paraquat exposure is even more acutely toxic, with a direct link to the development of Parkinson’s disease. If you were a licensed applicator or a farm worker who handled these chemicals across Nueces or San Patricio Counties, you have a right to hold these manufacturers responsible for your diagnosis. Average settlements for documented NHL cases range from $100,000 to over $500,000, with trial verdicts reaching far higher.
Why Time is the Enemy in Toxic Exposure Cases
In a car accident on Commercial St, the evidence is a dented bumper and a police report. In a toxic exposure case, the evidence is 40-year-old safety logs, the testimony of retired coworkers, and the medical records of an employer that may have declared bankruptcy in 1982. This is why you cannot wait.
Every month that passes in Aransas Pass:
- Buildings are demolished: Facilities where you were exposed are being torn down, removing the physical proof of asbestos or chemical residue.
- Witnesses are lost: Co-workers who can testify that you worked with “Kaylo” or “Unibestos” without a respirator are aging. Their testimony is the “smoking gun” of your case.
- Trust funds deplete: Asbestos bankruptcy trusts reduce their payment percentages to ensure they don’t run out. A claim filed in 2026 may pay more than the same claim filed in 2028.
- Statutes of limitations run: While the discovery rule protects you, it only starts the clock once you knew—or should have known—the cause of your illness. If you wait five years after a diagnosis to look into your rights, you may be barred from recovery.
We move to preserve evidence within days of your first call. We send formal spoliation demands to your former employers and subpoena the industrial hygiene records they’re required to keep. As Chad H. noted in his review: “Atty. Manginello and I had DIRECT COMMUNICATION on my legal issue and keeps you updated… He follows up with you which is unheard of with most firms.” Don’t let the corporations outwait you. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 now.
Frequently Asked Questions for Aransas Pass Workers
I was exposed to asbestos decades ago—is it too late?
No. For mesothelioma and other latent diseases, the statute of limitations in Texas typically starts at the moment of diagnosis or discovery of the injury’s cause, not the moment of exposure. If you were exposed in the 1970s and diagnosed last month, your claim is very likely alive.
My employer went bankrupt. Can I still sue?
Yes. Many major industrial employers and asbestos manufacturers established bankruptcy trusts specifically to pay future claimants. There is currently over $30 billion in these trusts. We also investigate solvent “successor” companies that took over the original facility.
How much is my toxic exposure case worth?
Every case is unique. Mesothelioma settlements can range from $1 million to $1.4 million on average, with verdicts reaching into the tens of millions. Benzene/leukemia cases and industrial explosion results vary based on the degree of corporate negligence and the severity of the illness.
Will filing a claim affect my VA or social security benefits?
Generally, no. Personal injury settlements and trust fund payments are separate from federal benefit programs. They do not cancel out your service-connected disability or your social security income.
What if I don’t know exactly what products I was exposed to?
That is our job. We use work history reconstruction, union records, and industrial hygiene databases to identify the specific products used at your Aransas Pass job site. You tell us where and when you worked; we identify the toxins.
How long do these cases take?
Trust fund claims can payout in as little as 90 days. Litigated lawsuits can take 1 to 3 years. For patients with a terminal diagnosis, we frequently file for “trial preference,” asking the court to fast-track the case due to the client’s health.
I’m worried my employer will fire me.
Federal and state whistleblower laws prohibit retaliation against workers who file safety-related claims. If your employer retaliates, we can add a separate wrongful termination or retaliation claim to your case.
Does it cost anything to start?
Zero. We operate on a contingency fee basis. We advance all costs for medical experts, filing fees, and evidence collection. If we don’t recover money for you, you don’t owe us a dime.
The Inner Advantage: Why We Beat the Insurance Defense Playbook
The corporate defense teams hired by the energy giants near Aransas Pass have 50 years of experience in making victims feel like they don’t have a case. They will tell you that you can’t prove which product killed you, they’ll blame your smoking or your diet, and they’ll try to hide behind workers’ comp. They have a playbook for every situation.
At Attorney 911, we have their playbook. Our associate attorney Lupe Peña spent years on the defense side, working for the firms that large insurance companies use to minimize and deny claims. He knows how they evaluate a case, how they try to “raid” your medical records for a pre-existing condition, and how they use delay tactics to outwait terminal patients. That switch changes outcomes. When Lupe evaluates your case, he sees the traps the other side is setting before they even set them.
Ralph Manginello brings 27+ years of trial experience and the weight of a firm that has litigated against multinational corporations like BP and Exxon. We don’t refer your case to someone else; we are your local South Texas advocates. As Glenda W. shared: “Mr. Ralph and Mr. Leo were very great and very helpful… They make you feel like family and even though the process may take some time, they make it feel like a breeze.” We treat you like a human being because you’ve already been treated like an expense by your employer.
Final Word: Your Recognition is the Beginning of Justice
You’ve spent your life building Aransas Pass. You’ve worked the docks, the refineries, the construction sites, and the deck boards that make this community thrive. You did what you were told, you worked hard to provide for your family, and you were betrayed. The illness you are carrying is a souvenir of that betrayal—a physical proof of corporate negligence.
Justice in a toxic exposure case isn’t just about a check. It is about the acknowledgment that what happened to you was wrong. It is about ensuring your family is provided for even when the corporations wanted to leave you with nothing. It is about making sure the companies that profile from Aransas Pass labor are held to the standards of the law.
The clock is running. Trust funds are depleting. Evidence is disappearing. But we are here. Attorney 911 is ready to fight for you. Ralph Manginello is ready to answer. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential consultation. The corporations that poisoned you have a team of lawyers. Now you have one too.
Principal Office: Houston, Texas. Serving Aransas Pass, Nueces County, San Patricio County, and the entire Texas Gulf Coast. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique.
Attorney Ralph Manginello: 27+ Years. Federal Court Admittee.
Attorney Lupe Peña: Former Insurance Defense Insider.
270+ Verified Google Reviews | 4.9 Star Rating.
1-888-ATTY-911.
Attorney Ralph Manginello breaks down million-dollar case criteria in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
Learn more about the process for your personal injury claim here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XwzYymneDVs
OSHA Benzene Standard (29 CFR 1910.1028): https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.1028
NCI Asbestos Exposure and Cancer Risk: https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/substances/asbestos/asbestos-fact-sheet
EPA East Palestine Response and Vinyl Chloride: https://www.epa.gov/east-palestine-oh-train-derailment
IARC Monograph 100C (Asbestos): https://publications.iarc.who.int/Book-And-Report-Series/Iarc-Monographs-On-The-Identification-Of-Carcinogenic-Hazards-To-Humans/Arsenic-Metals-Fibres-And-Dusts-2012
State Bar of Texas Attorney Search: https://www.texasbar.com/am/template.cfm?section=Find_a_Lawyer&contactid=199527
VA PACT Act Benefits for Toxic Exposure: https://www.va.gov/resources/the-pact-act-and-your-va-benefits/
Is There a Statute of Limitations on My Case? Listen to the Attorney 911 Podcast: https://share.transistor.fm/s/bddc1426
The Ultimate Guide to Offshore Accidents: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vd_HVPtPf4
MD Anderson Cancer Center Mesothelioma Program: https://www.mdanderson.org
Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO): https://www.asbestosdiseaseawareness.org
How Do Contingency Fees Work? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc
What Is Fair Compensation for Pain and Suffering? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LG07vbB4cdU
OSHA Process Safety Management Rules: https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.119
ClinicalTrials.gov for Mesothelioma: https://clinicaltrials.gov/search?cond=Mesothelioma
Camp Lejeune Justice Act of 2022 Text: https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/senate-bill/3373
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society: https://www.lls.org
Chemical Safety Board (CSB) Reports: https://www.csb.gov
NIOSH Silicosis Page: https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/silica/about/
ATSDR Toxicological Profile for Benzene: https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp3.pdf
Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation: https://www.curemeso.org
American Lung Association: https://www.lung.org
Department of Labor FELA Page: https://www.dol.gov
Join the 270+ clients who trust Attorney 911 with their most critical legal emergencies. From Aransas Pass job sites to the federal courthouse—we’ve been fighting for workers like you for 27+ years. Call 888-ATTY-911 today.