Cottle County Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injury Advocacy
If you worked for decades at the cotton gins in Paducah, maintained the rail lines that cut through the heart of Cottle County along the US 83 corridor, or managed herbicide applications across the Rolling Plains, you didn’t know you were breathing in a death sentence. You did the hard work required to build this region, trusting that the products you handled and the employers you served were keeping you safe. Today, as you or a loved one faces a diagnosis of mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia, or Parkinson’s disease, that trust has been shattered. The shortness of breath you feel while walking down 9th Street or the tremors that make everyday tasks in Cottle County impossible are not just “unfortunate events”—they are often the direct result of corporate decisions to value profit over human life.
At Attorney 911, we believe that workers in Cottle County deserve more than just sympathy; they deserve a relentless legal team that understands the specific industrial history of Northwest Texas. From the legacy of the Matador Ranch’s operations to the heavy machinery used in Cottle County’s agricultural and utility sectors, we know how exposure happened. We understand that in rural communities like Paducah, your workplace was your life, and the betrayal of that safety is a wound that goes beyond the physical.
Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña bring a unique “insider vs. outsider” dynamic to every Cottle County toxic exposure case. Ralph has spent over 27 years in the trenches of high-stakes litigation, including the landmark BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation that resulted in over $2.1 billion in total case compensation. He knows how to take on the world’s largest corporations in federal court. Lupe Peña provides the “insider” edge; as a former insurance defense attorney, he spent years inside the machine, learning the exact tactics companies use to suppress medical evidence and deny claims to workers in Cottle County. Together, we turn the corporate playbook against them to secure the maximum compensation you need for treatment at centers like MD Anderson or the specialist clinics in Lubbock.
The Moment of Discovery: Recognizing Toxic Harm in Cottle County
Toxic exposure is a “silent” injury. Unlike a car wreck on US 70 that is over in a second, toxic harm in Cottle County happens over decades. It is the cumulative effect of breathing in microscopic asbestos fibers at a local cotton gin in the 1970s, or the bioaccumulation of benzene while working maintenance on the railroad lines throughout the Rolling Plains. The realization often arrives as a shock—a routine check-up at Childress Regional Medical Center or a specialist in Wichita Falls leads to a biopsy, and suddenly, your work history is rewritten as a history of exposure.
This is the “Discovery Phase,” and it is the most critical time for your legal rights. Many residents in Cottle County believe that because their exposure happened 30 or 40 years ago, they can no longer file a claim. This is a myth that corporate defense teams want you to believe. Under the laws governing Cottle County, the “discovery rule” often pauses the clock. Your statute of limitations typically does not begin until you knew—or reasonably should have known—that your illness was caused by a specific exposure.
Whether you were a pipefitter, a railroad conductor, a gin operator, or a farmworker in Cottle County, you have rights. We are here to help you connect the symptoms you feel today—the dry cough, the chest pain, the chronic fatigue—to the documented safety violations of the companies that profit from Cottle County’s labor. You can reach our legal emergency line at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential evaluation of your exposure history.
The Anchor Case: Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure in Northwest Texas
Asbestos is the most documented killer in industrial history, and Cottle County is not immune. Although Cottle County is primarily known for its ranching and agriculture, the infrastructure that supported these industries—from the insulation in old Paducah public buildings to the gaskets and brake shoes on rail cars—was heavily saturated with asbestos.
The Biological Mechanism: How Asbestos Destroys the Mesothelium
When we talk about mesothelioma, we are talking about a failure of the body at the cellular level. Asbestos is a silicate mineral that breaks down into microscopic, needle-like fibers. These fibers are so small that they are easily inhaled or ingested. Once they enter the lungs, they travel to the pleura—the thin lining that allows your lungs to expand and contract.
Because these fibers are “biopersistent,” your body cannot break them down. Your immune system sends macrophages (white blood cells) to engulf and remove the fibers. However, the fibers are often longer than the macrophages themselves. This leads to “frustrated phagocytosis,” where the macrophages die while trying to clean the tissue, releasing inflammatory cytokines like TNF-α and IL-1β. This creates a state of chronic, permanent inflammation. Over a latency period of 20 to 50 years, this constant irritation causes DNA damage to the mesothelial cells, eventually triggering the malignant transformation that we know as mesothelioma.
For a worker who spent years in Cottle County’s older industrial sites, those fibers have been sitting in the lung lining since the 1960s or 70s, quietly causing damage. This is why a diagnosis in 2026 is linked directly to work performed decades ago. As Ralph Manginello often tells our clients, “The fibers don’t have an expiration date, and neither does the company’s liability.”
Multiple Pathways to Compensation for Cottle County Families
When we handle a mesothelioma case for a Cottle County family, we don’t just look for one source of money. We pursue a “Total Recovery Stack.” This is a differentiator that separates Attorney 911 from generalist firms. A single victim may be entitled to:
- Asbestos Bankruptcy Trust Claims: There are currently over 60 active trusts with approximately $30 billion in remaining assets. Companies like Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and W.R. Grace were forced to set this money aside to pay victims. We identify every product you touched and file with every eligible trust simultaneously.
- Solvent Defendant Lawsuits: Many asbestos manufacturers never went bankrupt. We can pursue direct litigation against these companies for full compensatory and punitive damages. In December 2025, a jury awarded $1.5 billion in a single-plaintiff mesothelioma case against Johnson & Johnson—the money is there for those who fight.
- VA Disability Benefits: Many Cottle County veterans were exposed to asbestos aboard Navy ships or in military housing. We help coordinate these benefits alongside your legal claims.
- Workers’ Compensation and Third-Party Claims: If you were a contractor at a site in Cottle County, you may have a claim against the premises owner in addition to your employer.
If you are facing this diagnosis in Paducah or anywhere in Cottle County, call 1-888-ATTY-911. We work on a contingency fee basis, meaning we advance all the costs of expert witnesses and industrial hygiene reports. You pay us nothing unless we win your case.
Axis 1: Toxic Substances — The Chemicals That Poisoned Cottle County
Beyond asbestos, Cottle County workers and residents have faced a range of toxic substances that rewrite blood chemistry and organ health. Axis 1 of our practice focuses on “What you were exposed to.”
Benzene and the Risk to Cottle County Energy and Rail Workers
Benzene is a fundamental industrial chemical, but it is a known Group 1 human carcinogen. In Cottle County, benzene exposure most commonly occurred through the handling of fuels, solvents, and crude oil byproducts. Railroad workers along the local BNSF lines and mechanics servicing heavy agricultural equipment in Paducah were often exposed to benzene vapor for years without respirators.
The Science of Benzene Cancer:
When you inhale benzene, your liver metabolizes it into benzene oxide, which then converts into muconaldehyde and hydroquinone. These metabolites travel to your bone marrow, where they attack hematopoietic stem cells. This specifically disrupts the DNA in your blood-producing cells, leading to chromosomal translocations like t(8;21). This is the hallmark of Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) and Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS).
If you worked in maintenance or fuel transport in Cottle County and have been diagnosed with a blood cancer, the company may try to blame “lifestyle factors.” Lupe Peña knows this defense playbook from the inside. We counter with hematologic oncology experts who can prove the link between your Cottle County work history and your specific leukemia subtype. For more specialized information, you can watch Ralph Manginello discuss the criteria for high-value cases on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
The Agricultural Crisis: Roundup and Paraquat in the Rolling Plains
Cottle County is heartland agriculture. For decades, local farmers and applicators have used herbicides to manage the vast cotton and grain fields that define the Paducah landscape. However, we now know that these “safe” chemicals were anything but.
Roundup (Glyphosate): Monsanto’s own internal documents, revealed in the “Monsanto Papers,” show they ghostwrote studies to hide the link between Roundup and Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL). If you used Roundup on your Cottle County property and are now dealing with swollen lymph nodes, night sweats, and an NHL diagnosis, you are a victim of corporate fraud. We track the latest verdicts, like the massive $2.25 billion award in 2024, to ensure our Cottle County clients get their fair share of the settlements.
Paraquat and Parkinson’s Disease: Paraquat is so toxic it is a restricted-use pesticide. For Cottle County applicators who used it for “burndown” before planting, the risk is neurological. Paraquat is a “redox cycler” that selectively destroys dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra—the exact part of the brain that fails in Parkinson’s disease. If you have been diagnosed with Parkinson’s after a career in Cottle County agriculture, call 888-ATTY-911 immediately. The filing window for these claims is active.
PFAS: The “Forever Chemicals” in Cottle County Water
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are indestructible molecules used in firefighting foam (AFFF) and industrial coatings. In rural Texas, these chemicals often leach into groundwater from training sites or manufacturing runoff. If the water in your section of Cottle County has tested positive for PFAS, you may be at elevated risk for kidney cancer, testicular cancer, and thyroid disease.
As Stephanie H. noted in her verified Google review of our firm: “I received a call from Leonor and she immediately reassured me and took me seriously… she really made me feel like I mattered throughout the entire process.” That is the level of care we provide to every Cottle County family facing the long-term health consequences of environmental contamination.
Axis 2: Dangerous Industry Workers — Shielding the Cottle County Workforce
Axis 2 focuses on “Where you were working.” Industrial work in Cottle County is inherently dangerous, but many injuries are the result of employers cutting corners on OSHA safety standards.
FELA: Protection for Cottle County Railroad Workers
The rail lines passing through Paducah are governed by the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA), not standard workers’ comp. Because Cottle County railroaders face unique risks—from silica dust while maintaining the track bed to traumatic injuries during switching operations—they have the right to sue the railroad for negligence.
Under FELA, the burden of proof is “featherweight.” If the railroad’s negligence contributed “in whole or in part” to your injury, they are liable. BNSF and other major railroads have massive legal teams, but Ralph Manginello has federal court admission and the trial experience to level the playing field for Cottle County workers. As Ralph explains in Episode 48 of the Attorney 911 podcast, the statute of limitations for these injuries can be complex: https://share.transistor.fm/s/bddc1426
Construction and Trench Safety in Paducah
Construction in Cottle County—whether building agricultural storage or maintaining US 83—often involves excavation. A trench collapse is one of the most terrifying events a worker can experience. One cubic yard of soil in Cottle County weighs nearly 3,000 pounds. If an employer fails to provide shoring or shielding in a trench 5 feet or deeper, they are violating 29 CFR 1926 Subpart P.
We don’t settle for the meager checks offered by workers’ comp for these catastrophic injuries. We look for “Third-Party Liability.” If the shoring equipment was defective, or if a general contractor oversaw an unsafe site in Cottle County, we pursue them for the full value of your pain, suffering, and lost future earnings. One of our clients, Ken T., shared: “Ralph listened intently… he treated me professionally, with respect and understanding… básicamente, he delivers!”
Industrial Explosions: Lessons from BP Texas City
While Cottle County doesn’t host massive refineries like those in the Houston Ship Channel, our firm’s background in refinery litigation is vital for local workers. Many Cottle County residents travel to the Gulf Coast for “turnaround” work or specialized industrial contracting.
Ralph Manginello’s direct involvement in the BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation (2005) solidified our firm’s reputation for taking on the biggest defendants in the world. We know that these “accidents” are usually the result of failing to follow Process Safety Management (PSM) standards (29 CFR 1910.119). If you were injured in an industrial explosion while working away from home, we bring that “big city” trial power back to Cottle County to protect your family.
The Insider Advantage: Why Lupe Peña Matters to Your Case
In Cottle County, people value straight talk and knowing who you’re dealing with. That’s why we are transparent about Lupe Peña’s background. Lupe used to be a defense attorney for the insurance companies. He sat in the conference rooms where they planned how to offer the lowest possible settlements to injured workers.
He knows exactly how they:
- Use “junk science” to argue that your cancer wasn’t caused by their chemicals.
- Scan your old medical records for any minor childhood illness to blame for your symptoms today.
- Delay cases of terminal patients in hopes that they pass away before a verdict is reached.
By having a former defense insider on your team at Attorney 911, you are taking away the element of surprise from the corporate lawyers. We anticipate their moves three steps ahead. To see how this works in practice, watch our video on secret insurance company tactics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UKRbFprB0E
Corporate Betrayal: The Evidence They Tried to Shred
The most infuriating part of toxic exposure is the cover-up. Our investigation teams specialize in “Corporate Genealogy” and document recovery. We cite the evidence the companies wanted to disappear:
- The Sumner Simpson Letters (1935): These letters prove that the leaders of the asbestos industry knew their product was lethal nearly 90 years ago and explicitly agreed to hide it from the public.
- The Johns-Manville internal memos (1933): Memos showing the company edited medical reports to remove mentions of asbestosis before they were published.
- The 3M PFOA Memos (1970s): Internal studies proving PFAS bioaccumulated in humans, which 3M suppressed for decades while the chemical entered the water systems of communities like ours.
In Cottle County, we hold people to their word. When a corporation lies for 50 years while you breathe their poison, it isn’t just a legal violation—it’s a moral one. We use these documents to secure “Punitive Damages,” which are designed to punish the company and make it too expensive for them to ever lie to Texas workers again.
Understanding Your Compensation: What is a Cottle County Case Worth?
We are often asked by neighbors in Paducah: “What is my case really worth?” No honest lawyer can give you a final number in a blog post, but we can provide the industry ranges based on our 27+ years of experience.
| Case Type | Average Recovery Range | Primary Factors |
|---|---|---|
| Mesothelioma | $1M – $10M+ | Number of identified defendants, age, and family status. |
| Benzene / AML | $500K – $2.5M | Duration of exposure and specific chromosomal damage. |
| FELA Traumatic Injury | $500K – $5M | Severity of disability and impact on railroad retirement. |
| Agriculture (Roundup) | $100K – $500K+ | Based on mass tort settlement tiers. |
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique. Results vary based on individual circumstances.
As Eddy M. wrote in his verified Google review: “Every question I had was answered thoroughly and in a timely manner… Melani was outstanding—always responsive.” We ensure that while we fight for these high-value settlements, you are never left in the dark.
Evidence Preservation: Why the Clock is Ticking in Cottle County
In a toxic exposure case, the “scene of the crime” is often a facility that was demolished 20 years ago. This makes evidence preservation a forensic challenge. Within 48 hours of you calling Attorney 911, we begin:
- Subpoenaing OSHA 300 Logs: We look for patterns of injury at your former Cottle County work sites.
- FOIA Requests: We pull every Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) report related to the land and facilities where you worked.
- Industrial Hygiene Reconstruction: We hire experts to model the air quality of Cottle County cotton gins and rail yards from the 1970s and 80s, proving that fiber counts exceeded the OSHA PEL (Permissible Exposure Limit).
- Co-worker Affidavits: We track down the people you worked with to corroborate the lack of safety equipment and the presence of dust and fumes.
Every month you wait is a month where another witness might pass away or another box of records might be “routinely” destroyed by a corporate successor. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 to start this preservation process today.
Specialized Medical Resources for Cottle County Residents
A legal claim is only half the battle; your health is the priority. Because Cottle County is rural, we help our clients navigate the medical landscape beyond Paducah.
- NCI-Designated Treatment: For mesothelioma and advanced leukemia, we often recommend patients seek consultations at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston or UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Both are world leaders in occupational cancers.
- Regional Care: many of our clients receive specialized oncology through Texas Oncology locations in Lubbock or Wichita Falls.
- Occupational Health Evaluation: We coordinate with the Southwest Center for Occupational and Environmental Health (UTHealth Houston) to provide the specialized certifications (like “B-Reader” X-ray interpretations) needed to prove asbestosis and silicosis in court.
- VA Resources: Veterans in Cottle County should access the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center for PACT Act toxic exposure screenings. These screenings are free and provide vital medical evidence for your case.
Frequently Asked Questions for Cottle County Workers
1. I worked at a cotton gin in Paducah 40 years ago. Is it too late to sue for mesothelioma?
In most cases, no. Because mesothelioma has a latency period of up to 50 years, the discovery rule in Texas generally allows you to file within two years of your diagnosis, not your exposure.
2. My employer in Cottle County has been out of business for decades. Who do I sue?
If your employer is gone, we pursue the manufacturers of the asbestos or chemicals they used (product liability). Many of these companies have bankruptcy trust funds specifically for this situation. We also look for “successor corporations” that bought the old company and its liabilities.
3. Will filing a lawsuit affect my Social Security or VA benefits?
No. Civil litigation and trust fund claims are independent of government benefits. In fact, for veterans, a legal case often provides the additional income needed to cover costs the VA doesn’t fully handle.
4. How much do toxic exposure lawyers cost in Cottle County?
At Attorney 911, we work on a 100% contingency basis. We pay for the doctors, the experts, and the court fees. If we don’t get you a settlement or verdict, you owe us nothing. There is zero financial risk to your family.
5. What are the first symptoms of benzene-related leukemia?
Early signs include unusual bruising, persistent fatigue that isn’t cured by rest, and frequent infections. If you worked with petroleum products in Cottle County and have these symptoms, you must tell your doctor about your chemical exposure history.
6. Can I sue for “take-home” exposure?
Yes. If you brought asbestos fibers home on your work clothes and your spouse later developed mesothelioma from doing the laundry, they have a separate legal claim. We have handled many “secondary exposure” cases for Texas families.
7. Does it matter that I was a smoker if I have lung cancer?
It actually makes your case stronger in many jurisdictions. Asbestos and smoking have a “synergistic” effect—they multiply the risk. The company that exposed you to asbestos doesn’t get a “free pass” because you smoked; they are responsible for the increased danger their product caused.
8. I’m worried about my immigration status. Can I still file a claim?
Absolutely. Your rights to a safe workplace and compensation for toxic harm are not dependent on your status. We provide fully bilingual services, and your information is protected by attorney-client privilege. Lupe Peña y nuestro equipo hablamos español.
9. What is a “B-Reader” and why do I need one?
A B-Reader is a radiologist who has passed a specialized NIOSH exam to identify dust-related lung diseases on X-rays. Standard radiologists often miss the subtle signs of asbestosis or silicosis. We ensure your imaging is reviewed by the right experts.
10. How long does a trust fund claim take?
Trust fund claims are usually faster than lawsuits, often paying out within 3 to 6 months of being filed. This provides immediate financial relief while we continue to litigate against solvent defendants in court.
11. What if I don’t remember the brand names of the products I used?
That’s why you hire us. We have massive databases of which asbestos insulation, gaskets, and industrial chemicals were used at specific Texas job sites during every decade. We use your work history to identify the defendants for you.
12. Are there any Superfund sites in or near Cottle County?
Yes, we monitor the EPA’s National Priorities List. While Cottle County is rural, neighboring areas have legacy contamination from mining, smelting, and oilfield waste. We analyze how regional groundwater plumes may affect local health.
13. Can a railroad worker from Cottle County sue for diesel exhaust?
Yes. Modern litigation has proven that diesel exhaust contains many of the same carcinogens as tobacco smoke. Under FELA, railroads are liable if they failed to provide proper ventilation or respirators to crews in the yards or on long hauls.
14. What happened in the BP Texas City litigation?
It was one of the most significant industrial safety cases in US history. The litigation proved that BP had a culture of cost-cutting that directly led to the 2005 explosion. Ralph Manginello’s experience in this case gives us a deep understanding of how to audit corporate safety cultures during discovery.
15. Where do I go for a toxic exposure screening as a veteran in Cottle County?
You should go to the nearest VA facility, likely in Childress or Lubbock, and request a Toxic Exposure Screening under the PACT Act. This is your right as someone who served our country.
16. What is “muconaldehyde” and why is it in my case?
Muconaldehyde is a metabolite of benzene. It is a highly reactive chemical that binds to your DNA and causes the mutations that lead to AML. Proving its presence and effect is how we win benzene cases.
17. Is Roundup still being sold in Cottle County?
Yes, but with massive new warnings. However, those warnings don’t help the people who used it for 20 years before they were added. The current litigation focuses on that “failure to warn” during the decades of peek use.
18. What is the difference between a “Survival Action” and “Wrongful Death”?
Wrongful death compensates the family for their loss (emotional and financial). A Survival Action recovers what the deceased person suffered (their own pain, their own medical bills) before they passed. In Cottle County, we usually file both to maximize family support.
19. Can I switch lawyers if my current one isn’t calling me back?
Yes. Many of our clients come to us after being ignored by “billboard” firms. As Christopher W. noted: “Ralph and the firm did more in 8 weeks than a previous attorney who had the case for OVER a year.” It is your case; you deserve an advocate who answers.
20. Does Cottle County have a high rate of mesothelioma?
Rural Texas counties often have hidden clusters of asbestos disease due to the specific types of industrial machines and old building materials used in agricultural support. We track these patterns through the Texas Cancer Registry.
21. What are the OSHA limits for asbestos on Cottle County job sites?
The current Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) is 0.1 fibers per cubic centimeter. However, the science confirms there is NO safe level of exposure. Any amount of asbestos can trigger malignancy in a susceptible person.
22. Can I get a settlement if I have “Pleural Plaques” but no cancer yet?
Yes, many asbestos trust funds provide compensation for non-malignant conditions like pleural thickening or asbestosis. This money can help fund the medical monitoring you need to catch any future cancer early.
23. What is the “Monsanto Papers” discovery?
It is a collection of internal emails and memos showing Monsanto knew Roundup was a probable carcinogen but spent millions on “reputation management” instead of warning farmers. We use these documents to prove “gross negligence.”
24. How do I prove I was in a “Confined Space” in a Cottle County facility?
We look at plant layouts and job descriptions. Confined spaces—like the inside of a cotton gin, a storage tank, or a locomotive engine compartment—trap toxic fumes and concentrate asbestos dust, making exposure much more intense.
25. What is the “Exclusive Remedy” rule in Texas workers’ comp?
It says you usually can’t sue your direct employer if they have workers’ comp. BUT, it doesn’t apply to “Third Parties.” We specialize in finding those third parties (manufacturers, owners) so you aren’t capped by workers’ comp limits.
26. Is Cottle County considered an “Oilfield” region?
While not as dense as the heart of the Permian, Cottle sits on the edge of major shale plays. We represent many “roughnecks” and truck drivers who live in Cottle County but work in the oilfield and face H2S and silica sand hazards.
27. What is “frustrated phagocytosis”?
It’s when your white blood cells try to eat an asbestos fiber but the fiber is too long. The cell “pops,” releasing its own digestive acids into your lung lining, which causes the permanent scarring and DNA damage that leads to cancer.
28. Can I receive a settlement for hearing loss from working the rail line?
Yes, FELA allows railroaders to recover for occupational hearing damage if the railroad failed to provide adequate protection or followed unsafe noise protocols. This is a very common and successful claim.
29. Do I need a lawyer for a trust fund claim?
Technically no, but practically yes. Trusts have complex “Trust Distribution Procedures” (TDPs). Without a lawyer who knows the criteria, you might get a “Category 2” payment when you deserve “Category 8.” We ensure you are filed in the highest possible tier.
30. How many clients has Attorney 911 helped?
We have helped thousands of families across Texas. You can see our reputation in our 270+ Google reviews, where we maintain a 4.9-star rating. We treat the people of Cottle County like the neighbors they are.
31. What is the “featherweight” burden in a FELA railroad case?
It means you only have to show the railroad was 1% responsible for your injury to recover. This is much easier than a standard car wreck case, where the rules are much tougher on the victim.
32. Can I get a settlement for Parkinson’s if I used herbicides in my yard?
If it was a Paraquat-based product (usually professional use only, but often found on farms), yes. We investigate whether you were exposed through drift or direct handling on a Cottle County ranch.
33. What is “successor liability”?
It’s when Company A (the bad one) gets bought by Company B. Company B tries to say “we didn’t do it.” The law often says “you bought the company, you bought the debt to the victims.” We are experts at tracing these corporate handoffs.
34. How does Attorney 911 investigate Cottle County sites?
We use historical satellite imagery, city archives, and the testimony of retired workers. We build a “digital floor plan” of how these old facilities looked in 1975 to show where the asbestos was.
35. What is the first thing I should do if I am diagnosed with an exposure-related disease?
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 and then tell your doctor the name of every chemical and industrial material you ever worked with. The medical record of your occupational history is the most important document in your case.
Your Team for the Fight: Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña
Choosing a lawyer is about trust. In Cottle County, you don’t want a lawyer who is afraid of a courtroom or a corporation. You want a team that has already been to the summit of the legal mountain. Ralph Manginello’s 27+ years of trial experience and his federal court mastery provide the “Outsider Force” that corporate defendants fear. Lupe Peña’s years on the insurance defense side provide the “Insider Intel” that ensures we are never caught off guard by their tricks.
We are a 4.9-star firm because we treat our clients like family. As Chavodrian M. wrote: “I had no idea what to do… Ralph Manginello called me so quick… amazing, thank you Attorney 911.” Whether you are in Paducah, Cee Vee, or any corner of Cottle County, we are your legal emergency responders.
The trusts are depleting. The statutes of limitations are running. The corporations are hoping you’ll stay silent. Don’t do it. Your work in Cottle County built the foundation of this region, and if that foundation was paid for with your health, it is time for the companies responsible to pay their debt to you.
Call us 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911. We are ready to fight for your family.
Principal Office: Houston, Texas. Attorney 911 serves Cottle County and all surrounding regions through local counsel and federal practice. No fee unless we win. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911