Robertson County Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injury Guide: Holding Corporations Accountable for Mesothelioma, Benzene Cancer, and Railroad Injuries
For more than a century, the trains have intersected at the Hearne “Hub City” railyards, and for decades, the draglines have carved lignite out of the earth at the Walnut Creek Mine. In Robertson County, work has always been hard, physical, and essential to the Texas power grid and transportation network. But for thousands of workers in Franklin, Hearne, Bremond, and Calvert, that work came with a hidden, lethal price. You showed up to the railyards, the Oak Grove Power Plant, or the cotton gins every day to provide for your family, trusting that your employer was providing a safe environment. We now know that many of the corporations operating in Robertson County knew for decades that the materials you handled—asbestos, benzene, coal dust, and silica—were carcinogenic.
If you have been diagnosed with mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia (AML), or a debilitating respiratory condition, you aren’t just “sick.” You are a victim of corporate concealment. At Attorney 911, led by Ralph Manginello and insurance-defense insider Lupe Peña, we don’t just “handle” claims; we dismantle the defenses used by multi-billion-dollar companies to avoid paying for the lives they’ve destroyed. We have spent more than 27 years in the trenches of Texas law, including direct litigation experience in the landmark $2.1 billion BP Texas City Refinery explosion case. We understand the industrial landscape of Robertson County because we live and work in the same Texas courts where these cases are won.
The Discovery of Betrayal: Why Robertson County Workers Are Falling Ill Decades Later
Toxic exposure is a unique kind of injury because it is invisible until it is catastrophic. Unlike a car wreck on Highway 6 or US-79, where the damage is immediate, the damage from breathing asbestos fibers in a Hearne locomotive shop or inhaling benzene vapors during a refinery turnaround can take 15 to 50 years to manifest. This is known as a “latency period,” and it is the primary tool corporations use to try to escape liability. They hope that by the time you receive a diagnosis at a facility like St. Joseph Health Center or a specialist center in Bryan-College Station, you will have forgotten which products you used or that the companies responsible will have filed for bankruptcy.
They are counting on your silence. They are counting on the fact that you might believe your illness is simply “old age” or “bad luck.” It isn’t. When chrysotile asbestos fibers are inhaled, they don’t just disappear. Because they are “biopersistent,” your body’s immune system—specifically your macrophages—attempts to destroy them through a process called “frustrated phagocytosis.” Because the needle-like fibers are too sharp and too long to be engulfed, the macrophages die, releasing a cascade of inflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen species. Over decades, this chronic inflammation damages DNA and deactivates tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and p53, eventually leading to the malignant transformation of cells known as mesothelioma.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified asbestos as a Group 1 known human carcinogen for decades. https://monographs.iarc.who.int/substances-labeled-with-iarc-monographs-group-1/
Our firm’s founder, Ralph Manginello, explains why the timing of your call is the most critical factor in your recovery in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bddc1426. Whether your exposure happened at the Walnut Creek lignite mine or while maintaining track for the Union Pacific, the “discovery rule” in Texas means your clock to file a claim often starts at the moment of diagnosis, not the moment of exposure. But as more people file claims, the assets in bankruptcy trust funds diminish. Waiting even a few months can mean receiving a smaller percentage of what you are owed.
The Insider Advantage: Why Lupe Peña’s Defense Background Is Your Nuclear Weapon
If you go to a generalist personal injury firm in Robertson County, you are getting an attorney who understands the law. If you come to Attorney 911, you are getting a legal team that includes a former insurance defense insider. Lupe Peña spent years on the other side of the table. He was trained by national defense firms to evaluate toxic exposure and industrial injury claims from the perspective of the insurer. He knows exactly how these companies try to undervalue your life.
They use a specific playbook to deny Robertson County workers:
- The Identification Defense: Claiming you can’t prove whose product you handled in 1978.
- The Lifestyle Defense: Blaming your illness on smoking or diet to distract from chemical exposure.
- The Workers’ Comp Shield: Trying to convince you that a small workers’ comp check is the only thing you’re allowed to receive.
Lupe Peña broke ranks because he saw how the system was rigged against laborers. Now, he uses that same “insider” knowledge to help us build cases that are move-mated. We anticipate the defense’s next ten moves before they even file a motion. When we sit down for a deposition, we know the questions they are afraid of because Lupe used to be the one trying to avoid them.
Ralph Manginello discusses the tactical advantage of having this level of insight on your team here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_qCwqfeRRs. In cases involving major industrial employers near Robertson County, this insider perspective is often the difference between a lowball settlement and a multi-million dollar verdict.
Mesothelioma and Asbestos: The Anchor of Industry in Robertson County
Mesothelioma is a signature disease. It occurs almost exclusively as a result of asbestos exposure. For the generations of men and women who built the infrastructure of Robertson County, asbestos was everywhere. It was in the pipe insulation at the power plants, the brake shoes and gaskets in the railroad shops, and the “mud” or joint compound used in every major construction project in Franklin and Hearne before the 1980s.
The Mechanism of Action: How Asbestos Kills
Asphalt and concrete don’t kill; it’s the microscopic amphibole and serpentine fibers that do. When these fibers reach the pleural lining of the lungs—the mesothelium—they stay there forever. The body cannot metabolize them. This leads to:
- Pleural Plaques: Scarring of the lung lining, the first sign of exposure.
- Asbestosis: A progressive, irreversible scarring of the lung tissue that makes breathing nearly impossible.
- Mesothelioma: A terminal cancer with a median survival of 12-21 months, often diagnosed only after it has reached Stage III or IV.
The National Cancer Institute provides detailed data on the cellular progression of asbestosis and mesothelioma here: https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/substances/asbestos/asbestos-fact-sheet
Strategic Compensation: Trust Funds vs. Litigation
A major mistake many firms make is only pursuing one path for their clients. In Robertson County, we pursue a “dual-path” strategy for every asbestos client. There are currently over 60 active asbestos bankruptcy trust funds with more than $30 billion in assets. Companies like Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and W.R. Grace established these trusts as a condition of their bankruptcy to ensure future victims could be paid.
However, many other defendants remained solvent. We litigate against the “solvent” defendants in the civil court system while simultaneously filing claims with multiple trust funds. A typical mesothelioma victim may qualify for payments from 10 to 20 different trusts. We don’t leave money on the table.
Attorney Ralph Manginello breaks down how we calculate the value of these high-stakes cases: https://share.transistor.fm/s/d690a218. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes, but our experience with cases reaching into the seven and eight figures informs every strategy we deploy.
Disclaimer: Every case is unique. Results vary based on the specific facts of your exposure and diagnosis.
Axis 1: Toxic Substances — Benzene, PFAS, and the Chemical Landscape of the Brazos Valley
While asbestos is the most famous toxin, Robertson County workers face a spectrum of other chemical threats. If you worked in any capacity involving fuel transport, specialized cleaning, or industrial maintenance, you likely encountered benzene.
Benzene and the Blood: The Path to Leukemia
Benzene (C6H6) is one of the most widely used industrial chemicals in the world, particularly in the Texas oil and gas industry. It is a natural component of crude oil and is produced at refineries located just a short distance from Robertson County. When you inhale benzene, it travels to your liver, where an enzyme called CYP2E1 converts it into toxic metabolites like muconaldehyde and hydroquinone. These metabolites travel to your bone marrow, where they directly attack hematopoietic stem cells.
This molecular sabotage leads to:
- Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML): A fast-acting blood cancer.
- Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS): A pre-leukemic condition where the bone marrow fails to produce healthy blood cells.
- Aplastic Anemia: The total failure of the bone marrow to function.
OSHA’s current permissible exposure limit for benzene is 1 ppm over an 8-hour shift, but toxicologists agree there is no safe level of benzene exposure for the human blood-forming system. https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.1028
If you were a truck driver hauling fuel along TX-6 or a maintenance worker at a local facility, your exposure may have far exceeded safe levels. We utilize industrial hygienists to reconstruct your exposure levels, proving to a jury that your diagnosis wasn’t “random”—it was a mathematical certainty caused by your workplace.
PFAS: The “Forever Chemical” Crisis
PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are synthetic chemicals found in firefighting foam (AFFF) used at regional municipal airports and industrial sites. These chemicals are called “forever chemicals” because the carbon-fluorine bond is the strongest in organic chemistry; they never break down. Instead, they “bioaccumulate” in your blood and organs.
PFAS exposure is linked to:
- Kidney cancer
- Testicular cancer
- Thyroid disease
- Ulcerative colitis
In April 2024, the EPA finalized a strict national primary drinking water regulation for several PFAS chemicals, acknowledging that even parts-per-trillion concentrations are hazardous. https://www.epa.gov/sdwa/and-polyfluoroalkyl-substances-pfas
Axis 2: Dangerous Industries — Representing Robertson County’s Workforce
Robertson County’s economy is powered by industries that OSHA classifies as high-hazard. We don’t just know the law; we know the specific job sites.
FELA Railroad Injuries in Hearne
Hearne, Texas, is the “Hub City” for a reason. For over a century, the intersection of major rail lines has defined the town. However, railroad workers are not covered by standard workers’ compensation. Instead, they are protected by the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA).
Under FELA, a railroad worker has the right to sue their employer for negligence. The burden of proof is “featherweight”—you only need to prove that the railroad’s negligence played any part, however small, in your injury. From machinist jobs in the shops where asbestos brake shoes were ground down to conductors exposed to diesel exhaust, the FELA pathway is the only way to recover full damages for lost earning capacity.
We have a deep understanding of the Class I railroads, including Union Pacific, and their history of failing to provide respiratory protection and safe tools. If you were injured in the yard or developed cancer after a career on the rails, FELA is your shield.
Lignite Mining and Power Generation: Wal-Nut Creek & Oak Grove
Robertson County is home to some of the most significant energy production in the state. Lignite mining involves massive earth-moving equipment and the generation of immense amounts of respirable crystalline silica and coal dust.
When silica particles reach the alveoli of the lungs, they are cytotoxic. The lung tissue scars in response, leading to silicosis. This is not just a “breathing problem”—it is a progressive, fatal disease that increases your risk of tuberculosis and lung cancer. The miners at the Walnut Creek Mine and the operators at the Oak Grove Power Plant have been the backbone of Texas energy for years, but they have also been the most exposed to these dust-borne hazards.
OSHA’s 2016 PEL reduction for silica from 100 to 50 μg/m³ was a major admission that previous standards weren’t enough to prevent lung destruction. https://www.osha.gov/silica-crystalline
Oil and Gas Production: Onshore Drilling Accidents
As a “non-subscriber” state, many Texas oil and gas employers in the fringe of the Haynesville and Eagle Ford basins do not carry traditional workers’ comp. This allows us to sue them directly for full tort damages if they fail to maintain equipment or ignore safety protocols on a rig. Struck-by injuries, H2S gas exposure, and well-control events are constant risks in the Robertson County oilfield.
The Corporate Concealment: The “Sumner Simpson” Legacy
The most devastating part of any toxic exposure case is the proof that the companies KNEW. As early as 1935, Sumner Simpson, the president of Raybestos-Manhattan, wrote to Vandiver Brown of Johns-Manville about suppressing a study on the “evil effects of asbestos dust.” His words became the smoking gun of the industry: “The less said about asbestos, the better off we are.”
This culture of silence continues today with “Forever Chemicals” and industrial solvents. Corporations view OSHA fines—which max out at a meager $16,131 for a “serious” violation—as a basic cost of doing business. They would rather pay a fine than spend millions on ventilation systems or safer chemicals.
When you hire Attorney 911, you aren’t just filing a claim. You are joining a 27-year legacy of making these companies pay enough to hurt. We use their internal memos and suppressed studies to prove gross negligence, which pulls the trigger for punitive damages. Punitive damages don’t just compensate you; they punish the corporation to ensure they never do this to another family in Robertson County.
How to Protect Your Case: The Robertson County Evidence Preservation Protocol
In a toxic tort case, the evidence doesn’t involve skid marks on the road—it involves pieces of paper that are 40 years old. Corporations frequently “lose” personnel files or shred industrial hygiene reports that prove high chemical concentrations in the workplace.
The moment you hire us, we send Spoliation and Preservation Demands to current and former employers. We demand they preserve:
- OSHA 300 Logs: Every injury and illness recorded at the facility.
- SDS Sheets: Material safety data for every chemical you ever handled.
- Industrial Hygiene Records: Air sampling data that proves they knew the air was toxic.
- Personnel Files: Proving your dates of employment and job titles.
If you are still working, or have recently left an industrial job, you can documentation your own evidence. Read Ralph’s guide on using your phone to secure evidence here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs.
Compensation: What Is Your Robertson County Claim Worth?
Every case is different, but the damages in toxic exposure cases are among the highest in the civil justice system because the injuries are permanent and often fatal.
We fight for recovery in these categories:
- Medical Expenses: Past and future oncology, surgery, and home health care.
- Lost Earning Capacity: Replacing the income you would have earned in your specialized trade.
- Pain and Suffering: Compensation for the physical agony of cancer and respiratory failure.
- Loss of Consortium: Providing for the spouse and children who lose the companionship and support of a loved one.
While every case varies, settlements for mesothelioma in Texas typically range from $1 million to $2 million, with jury verdicts in the state reaching $10 million to $50 million+ for egregious corporate conduct. In 2024, a Pennsylvania jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil for a single benzene-induced leukemia case.
We represent Robertson County victims on a Contingency Fee Basis. You pay us nothing upfront. We advance all the costs of the litigation, including hiring world-class toxicologists and oncologists. If we don’t win your case, you owe us absolutely nothing. Ralph Manginello explains the “no fee unless we win” guarantee in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc.
Why Choose Attorney 911? The 4.9-Star Client Experience
When you call 1-888-ATTY-911, you aren’t reaching a national referral service. You are reaching a Texas firm that treats every client like a family member in crisis. We maintain a 4.9-star rating across 270+ verified Google reviews because we communicate.
As our client Chad H. wrote: “A true PITT BULL and fighter. He don’t play! Unlike some law firms where you are dealing with an answering service and never even hear back, that’s NOT the case here. Ralph and I had DIRECT COMMUNICATION on my legal issue.”
Stephanie H. shared a similar experience: “When I felt I had no hope or direction, Leonor reached out. She and her team were beyond amazing! She took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders. I recommend this firm to everyone!”
We also understand that many of our skilled tradespeople in Robertson County are Spanish-speaking. Our firm is fully bilingual. As our associate Lupe Peña says, “¿Expuesto a sustancias tóxicas en el trabajo? Hablamos su idioma. No se rinda.” Your immigration status does not affect your right to a safe workplace or your right to sue a company that poisoned you.
Practical Resources for Robertson County Victims
If you have been diagnosed, your first priority is medical care. We recommend seeking specialists at NCI-designated centers near your area:
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston, TX): The gold standard for mesothelioma and leukemia. https://www.mdanderson.org
- Southwest Center for Occupational and Environmental Health (UTHealth Houston): Specialists in diagnosing work-related illness. https://sph.uth.edu/research/centers/swcoeh/
- Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center (Houston, TX): For veterans seeking PACT Act screenings and service-connected disability. https://www.va.gov/houston-health-care/
Frequently Asked Questions for Robertson County Workers
Can I file a claim if my exposure happened 30 years ago?
Yes. Mesothelioma and benzene-related cancers have long latency periods. The law understands this. The “Discovery Rule” means your time limit to file generally doesn’t start until you are diagnosed and have reason to believe the illness was work-related.
What if the company I worked for is now out of business?
Many industrial companies that used asbestos are now bankrupt, but they were required by law to set up massive Insurance Trusts to pay future victims. We can file claims with these trusts even if the building is gone and the company is closed.
Will filing a lawsuit affect my Social Security or VA benefits?
No. Personal injury settlements and trust fund payments are generally considered separate from your federal benefits. They do not disqualify you from receiving the benefits you earned through your service or your taxes.
How much do you charge for a consultation?
Consultations are 100% free. We will listen to your work history, review your medical diagnosis, and tell you exactly what your pathways to compensation look like—with no obligation to hire us.
I worked at several different plants. How do we know which one is responsible?
Under the “substantial factor” test set by Texas courts, we do not have to prove that one single fiber or one single day caused your cancer. We prove that the cumulative exposure across your career was a substantial factor in your illness. We name all potentially liable parties to ensure the largest possible recovery stack.
Contact the Robertson County Heavyweights Today
The companies that ignored your safety have had a head start. They have been preparing their defenses for years. It is time for you to level the playing field. Whether you worked at the lignite mine, maintained the Union Pacific rail lines, or were exposed in a Hearne construction project, your rights are absolute.
We are ready to answer the call. 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, your legal emergency is our priority.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911.
Attorney 911 / The Manginello Law Firm
Principal Office: Houston, Texas. Serving Franklin, Hearne, and the entire Brazos Valley.
This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Contact us for a free consultation about your specific situation. Principal office: Houston, Texas.
Axis 1 Deep Dive: Benzene and the Blood-Forming Organs of the Middle Brazos
In the industrial corridors surrounding Robertson County, benzene is a constant, invisible threat. It is a colorless, sweet-smelling chemical that volatilizes at room temperature, making it incredibly easy for refinery operators and fuel haulers to inhale.
Molecular Destruction
Benzene is a “genotoxin.” This means it doesn’t just irritate your lungs—it changes your DNA. When benzene enters the bloodstream, it travels to your bone marrow. Your bone marrow is the “factory” for your blood. It produces your red blood cells, your white blood cells (which fight infection), and your platelets (which stop bleeding).
Benzene’s metabolites, specifically hydroquinone, cause “chromosomal aberrations.” In benzene victims, we specifically look for translocations at chromosomes 8, 21, and 15. These specific genetic “breaks” are the diagnostic evidence that proves the benzene at your job caused your Acute Myeloid Leukemia.
If you are noticing these symptoms, contact your doctor immediately and then call us:
- Excessive fatigue and weakness (signs of anemia).
- Frequent, unexplained fevers or infections (signs of low white blood cell counts).
- Easy bruising or petechiae—small red spots under the skin (signs of low platelets).
Ralph Manginello explains why these medical details are the key to winning a benzene case: https://share.transistor.fm/s/aea9f03e.
Bridge Content: The Intersection of Industry and Exposure
A major advantage of hiring Attorney 911 is our ability to see “stacked claims.” Many workers in Robertson County weren’t just exposed to ONE thing—they were exposed to many.
The Railroad-Asbestos Bridge (Hearne Hub City)
If you were a boilermaker or mechanic in the Hearne rail yards, you likely handled asbestos insulation on steam boilers AND ground down asbestos brake shoes. This means you have a FELA negligence claim against the railroad AND multiple trust fund claims against the manufacturers of those brake shoes and boilers.
The Power Plant-Chemical Bridge (Oak Grove)
Maintenance staff at power generation facilities often handled asbestos gaskets while also using benzene-based solvents for cleaning parts. You may be entitled to mesothelioma compensation AND benzene leukemia compensation simultaneously.
Most firms will only file the “easy” claim. We investigate your entire work history to find every available dollar. As Ralph discusses in his “Process for a PI Claim” podcast, we don’t stop until every stone is unturned: https://share.transistor.fm/s/8babce5d.
The Clock is Ticking: Trust Fund Erosion
We must be honest with Robertson County families: the money in asbestos trust funds is not infinite. Trusts use “payment percentages” to ensure they don’t run out of money. For example, the Manville Trust—the largest asbestos trust—initially paid 100% of claim values. Today, that percentage has dropped significantly to around 5% of the total scheduled value because so many thousands of workers have been diagnosed.
This is why “waiting to see how you feel” is the worst legal strategy. Every month that passes without a filed claim is a month where the trust fund assets could be reduced. Filing early “locks in” your position and your payment percentage.
Why We Fight: The Manginello Family Values
Attorney 911 isn’t a faceless corporation. Ralph Manginello is a family man who grew up in the Memorial area of Houston. He was a starting point guard for a championship basketball team and was inducted into his high school’s athletic Hall of Fame. He brings that competitive, “refuse-to-lose” spirit to the courtroom every day.
When you work with us, you aren’t talking to an intake specialist in another state. You are talking to a team that knows the Brazos Valley. Whether we are discussing your case over a phone call or meeting you after a treatment session at a cancer center, you are treated with the respect you earned through a lifetime of hard work.
Join the 270+ clients who have given us a 4.9-star rating. Join the families who have successfully faced off against the biggest corporations in the world and won.
Your fight starts with one call. We answer. 1-888-ATTY-911.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Results vary based on years of exposure, product identification, and individual health history. Hablamos Español.
Detailed Support Resources for Our Clients
Living with a terminal diagnosis or a permanent industrial injury is exhausting. We believe in providing our clients with every resource possible to manage their daily lives.
1. Financial Assistance for Treatment
The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) offer specific grants for travel and medication co-pays for benzene victims. https://www.lls.org/support-resources/financial-support
2. Mesothelioma Patient Support
The Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation provides “Meso Connect,” a service that pairs newly diagnosed patients with survivors who can provide emotional guidance. https://www.curemeso.org/support/meso-connect/
3. Occupational Disease Advocacy
The Center for Construction Research and Training (CPWR) provides safety toolboxes and data on latent hazards in the trades. https://www.cpwr.com/
4. Veterans-Specific Resources
Veterans exposed at bases like Camp Lejeune or through shipboard asbestos should register with the VA’s Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry to document their exposure for future PACT Act claims. https://www.publichealth.va.gov/exposures/burnpits/registry.asp
By naming these resources and providing these links, we ensure that our Robertson County neighbors have the tools to survive while we handle the legal war.
Final Word on Corporate Responsibility
The draglines at the Walnut River mine aren’t going to stop, and the trains at Hearne will keep moving. But when those industries cause harm, they must be held to account. The “Texas Way” isn’t about letting big companies walk all over the workers who made them wealthy; it’s about holding everyone responsible for their actions.
If you or a loved one has suffered because a corporation in or near Robertson County valued their stock price more than your lungs, it is time to move. You have the experience of Ralph Manginello and the insider knowledge of Lupe Peña behind you.
Don’t wait. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today.
FAQ Continued: Substantive Answers for Robertson County
What if I was a smoker and have lung cancer but was also exposed to asbestos?
You still have a case. Under the Helsinki Criteria used by medical experts, smoking and asbestos are “synergistic.” This means they don’t just add together; they multiply the risk. Asbestos exposure makes the damage from smoking 50 times more likely to result in cancer. The corporation that exposed you is still liable for their portion of that risk multiplier.
Does it matter if I haven’t worked at the exposure site for 20 years?
No. The latency period for mesothelioma is specifically 20 to 50 years. The law expects cases to be filed decades later. We use union dues records, Social Security earnings statements, and co-worker affidavits to prove exactly where you were working in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s.
Can my family sue if my loved one has already passed away?
Yes. You can file a “Wrongful Death” claim to cover the loss of income and support, and a “Survival Action” to recover for the pain and suffering your loved one experienced before they passed. In Texas, there is typically a 2-year statute of limitations from the date of death to file a wrongful death lawsuit.
What is the “Insider Advantage” you talk about with Lupe Peña?
Most attorneys only see what’s in the law books. Lupe Peña saw what was in the insurance company’s emails. He knows how they classify certain Robertson County job sites and which “expert” witnesses they hire to try to lie about the health risks of their chemicals. That knowledge is the ultimate “spy” in the enemy camp.
I was told my industry had an “OSHA exemption.” Is that true?
Very rarely. Even when certain small agricultural operations have limited OSHA oversight, the “General Duty Clause” of the Occupational Safety and Health Act still requires every employer to provide a workplace free from recognized hazards. Furthermore, product manufacturers (like those of Roundup or Paraquat) are NEVER exempt from their duty to provide safe products and adequate warnings.
Closing Command
You’ve read the science. You’ve seen the corporate concealment history. You know who we are.
One number. One call. Maximum accountability.
1-888-ATTY-911
Attorney 911 / The Manginello Law Firm
We Fight. You Win.
Principal office: Houston, Texas. Admitted to practice in all Texas state and federal courts. Every case is different. Results are not guaranteed.