Brazos Country Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injury Justice: The Attorney 911 Guide to Corporate Accountability
The cough started as a persistent annoyance during your commute along I-10 through Brazos Country. Then came the fatigue that sleep couldn’t fix, followed by a diagnosis that felt like a death sentence: mesothelioma or acute myeloid leukemia. For decades, the men and women who built the infrastructure of Austin County and the surrounding Texas Brazos Valley went to work with a sense of pride. You were pipefitters at refineries just down the road, insulators at power plants, or laborers handling heavy machinery in Sealy and Brookshire. You didn’t know that every breath you took in those facilities was saturated with microscopic killers—asbestos fibers, benzene vapors, and crystalline silica—that were quietly rewriting your DNA.
Corporate defendants like Johns-Manville, ExxonMobil, and Monsanto didn’t just ignore these risks; they buried them. While you were providing for your family in Brazos Country, these multi-billion-dollar entities were suppressing studies and ghostwriting safety reports to keep the assembly lines moving. Now, as the latency clock of 20 to 50 years finally runs out, you are the one left to face the medical and financial fallout. At Attorney 911, we believe your illness isn’t an “accident”—it is the calculated result of corporate greed. We don’t just file claims; we wage war on the companies that poisoned Brazos Country families.
Our founding attorney, Ralph Manginello, has spent over 27 years in the trenches of Texas courtrooms, including the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas. He was part of the litigation team for the BP Texas City Refinery explosion case, which resulted in a $2.1 billion total resolution. His partner in this fight, Lupe Peña, spent years on the other side of the v. as an insurance defense attorney. Lupe knows the exact playbook corporate insurers use to deny and devalue your claim because he used to help them write it. Today, he uses that “flipped” insider knowledge to ensure Brazos Country workers receive every cent they are owed.
If you or a loved one has been diagnosed with a terminal or chronic illness linked to your work history in the Brazos Country area, you need more than a lawyer. You need a team that understands the macrophage failure mechanism of asbestos and the CYP2E1 metabolic activation of benzene. You need Attorney 911. Call us 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, zero-obligation consultation. We work on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay us nothing unless we win your case.
The Science of Betrayal: How Toxic Substances Destroy the Brazos Country Workforce
The most common misconception we hear from families in Brazos Country is that their illness is simply a result of “getting older” or “bad luck.” To hold a corporation accountable, you must first understand the biological mechanism of what happened to your body. Toxic exposure isn’t a single event; it is a microscopic invasion that bypasses your body’s natural defenses.
The Macrophage Failure: Why Asbestos Fibers Never Leave Your Lungs
Asbestos isn’t dangerous because it is chemically poisonous in the traditional sense; it is dangerous because it is mechanically indestructible. In Brazos Country’s older residential buildings and industrial sites near Sealy, asbestos was used for everything from pipe insulation to floor tiles. When these materials are disturbed—during a renovation or a maintenance turnaround at a nearby plant—at least six types of silicate minerals release microscopic fibers into the air.
These fibers, particularly the needle-like amphibole varieties like amosite or crocidolite, are small enough to be inhaled deep into the Alveolar region of the lungs. Your immune system identifies these fibers as foreign invaders and sends specialized cells called macrophages to engulf and destroy them. This is where the tragedy begins. Because asbestos fibers are “biopersistent,” the macrophage cannot break them down. In a process known as “frustrated phagocytosis,” the macrophage dies while attempting to consume the fiber, releasing a cascade of inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) into the surrounding tissue.
Over 15 to 50 years, this chronic inflammatory environment causes cumulative DNA damage. The fibers physically interfere with mitosis (cell division), tangling with chromosomes and causing deletions in tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and p16. By the time a Brazos Country worker is diagnosed with pleural mesothelioma, the cancer has already spent decades developing under the radar.
Attorney Ralph Manginello discusses the complexity of these high-value cases in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies all forms of asbestos as Group 1 known human carcinogens. https://monographs.iarc.who.int/substances-labeled-with-iarc-classifications/
Benzene and the Bone Marrow: Rewriting Your Blood in Austin County
If your career took you to the refineries in the Houston Ship Channel or the chemical plants lining the Texas Gulf Coast, benzene was likely your constant, invisible companion. Benzene (C₆H₆) is a natural component of crude oil and a fundamental building block of the petrochemical industry. It is colorless, sweet-smelling, and devastatingly toxic to the human blood-forming system.
When you inhale benzene vapor at a Brazos Country job site, it enters your liver, where an enzyme called CYP2E1 converts it into benzene oxide. This is then metabolized into highly reactive compounds like muconaldehyde and p-benzoquinone. These metabolites don’t stay in the liver; they migrate to your bone marrow, where they attack hematopoietic stem cells—the “mother cells” that create your red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets.
This molecular assault leads to specific chromosomal translocations, such as t(8;21) or t(15;17), which are the hallmark biomarkers of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). Juries have seen the evidence of this betrayal; in 2024, a jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil for a mechanic’s benzene-related leukemia. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes, but they demonstrate why specific scientific evidence is the most powerful tool in the Brazos Country courts.
OSHA’s benzene standard (29 CFR 1910.1028) sets the permissible exposure limit at 1 ppm, but scientific consensus shows there is no truly safe level of exposure. https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.1028
Identifying the Brazos Country Defendant Roster
To recover compensation, we must identify the specific entities that created the hazard. Brazos Country’s location in Austin County puts it at the crossroads of several high-risk industries. Our investigation focuses on the major players who have historically operated in our region.
The Refinery and Petrochemical Giants
Many Brazos Country residents commute to the massive industrial complexes just east of us. We aggressively pursue claims against:
- ExxonMobil: Operating the Baytown complex and Beaumont refinery, where benzene and asbestos were pervasive for decades.
- Shell and Motiva: Central to the Deer Park and Port Arthur corridors.
- BP: Whose Texas City refinery history Ralph Manginello knows firsthand from the $2.1 billion litigation following the 2005 explosion.
- LyondellBasell and Valero: Major employers along the Ship Channel with documented histories of regulatory violations.
Asbestos Product Manufacturers and the Trust Fund Moat
For Brazos Country workers exposed to insulation, gaskets, or packing, the manufacturer of the product is often the primary target. While many—like Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and W.R. Grace—filed for bankruptcy to avoid direct lawsuits, they were forced to establish bankruptcy trusts.
- The Manville Trust: Has paid out over $5 billion to victims but currently pays only ~5% of approved values due to asset depletion.
- The Pittsburgh Corning Trust: Often pays a significantly higher percentage (~24.5%).
- The USG Asbestos Trust: Covering joint compound and wallboard products used in every Brazos Country construction project before 1978.
We know how to navigate the “Trust Distribution Procedures” (TDP) for all 60+ active trusts to maximize your recovery. As Lupe Peña often points out, most law firms only file with one or two trusts. We screen you for EVERY trust your work history qualifies you for.
Brazos Country Case Type Tiers: Where You Were Exposed
We have categorized the most common exposure scenarios for Austin County and Brazos Country residents. If you recognize your workplace or job title below, the law identifies you as a potential claimant.
Tier 1: Mesothelioma and Asbestos (The Anchor)
If you worked as an insulator, pipefitter, boilermaker, or welder in the refineries or power plans near Brazos Country between 1950 and 1990, you were breathing in a death sentence. Asbestos was the “miracle fiber” used in Kaylo pipe insulation and Unibestos block.
We don’t just look at your direct employer; we look at the manufacturers of the products you handled. If you are a Navy veteran living in Brazos Country, your exposure likely occurred in the cramped engine rooms of ships where every pipe was lagged with asbestos.
Compensation Pathways: We pursue a dual-path strategy for mesothelioma: simultaneous filings with asbestos bankruptcy trusts for quick payouts and civil lawsuits against solvent (non-bankrupt) defendants for full compensatory and punitive damages.
As Ralph explains in our podcast on statute of limitations, the discovery rule is your best friend: https://share.transistor.fm/s/bddc1426
Tier 1: Benzene and Industrial Chemical Exposure
For the Brazos Country workforce employed in petroleum transport, tank cleaning, or refinery operations, benzene exposure is the primary culprit behind blood cancers. If you spent years hauling gasoline along I-10 or working the “BTX” (Benzene, Toluene, Xylene) units at a regional plant, your bone marrow was under constant chemical siege.
We use industrial hygiene experts to reconstruct your “ppm-years” of exposure. Even if you don’t have records from 1985, we can use co-worker testimony and SDS (Safety Data Sheets) from the era to prove the defendants knew their benzene levels were killing you.
Tier 1: Industrial Explosion and Refinery Accidents
Brazos Country sits near the most volatile industrial corridor in the world. When a plant like ExxonMobil Baytown (2019) or BP Texas City (2005) explodes, the injuries are catastrophic—thermal burns, blast barotrauma, and toxic inhalation from chemical releases.
Ralph Manginello’s direct involvement in the BP $2.1 billion litigation means we understand the role of OSHA’s Process Safety Management (PSM) standard (29 CFR 1910.119). These explosions aren’t “acts of God”; they are the result of deferred maintenance and ignored safety alarms.
Read more on refinery accidents from OSHA: https://www.osha.gov/chemical-petrochemical
Tier 2: Construction and Pipeline Injuries in Austin County
As Brazos Country continues to grow, construction and pipeline activity along the Brazos River and I-10 has surged.
- Scaffold Falls: Under OSHA 29 CFR 1926.451, your employer is responsible for guardrails and fall arrest systems. If you fell because a contractor cut corners, we pursue third-party liability that goes far beyond the meager checks from workers’ comp.
- Trench Collapses: A cubic yard of soil weighs 3,000 pounds. If you were sent into an unshored trench 5 feet or deeper in Brazos Country, your employer violated federal law.
- Crane Collapses: Often the result of foundation failure or lifting beyond the load chart—negligence that we can prove through maintenance logs and operator certification checks.
Tier 2: PFAS “Forever Chemicals” and Brazos Country Water
PFAS (Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances) are used in firefighting foam (AFFF) and industrial coatings. They accumulate in the body and never break down. If you are a firefighter in the Brazos Country Volunteer Fire Department or worked at a nearby airport, your bioaccumulation of PFAS may be linked to kidney or testicular cancer.
The EPA recently set a maximum contaminant level (MCL) of just 4 parts per TRILLION for PFOA and PFOS. https://www.epa.gov/sdwa/and-polyfluoroalkyl-substances-pfas
The Lupe Peña Advantage: Why an Insider Matters
In a verified Google review, Chad H. described Ralph as a “PITT BULL” who “don’t play.” But every pit bull needs a navigator who knows the enemy’s escape routes. That is Lupe Peña.
Before joining Attorney 911, Lupe was a defense attorney for major insurance carriers. He saw how corporations would use “spoliation” to destroy safety records before a victim could file a claim. He saw them use the “smoking defense” to blame a lung cancer patient’s lifestyle for a disease caused by asbestos.
Today, Lupe uses that experience to build “defense-proof” cases for Brazos Country clients. He knows exactly which documents the insurance adjusters are trying to hide and how to subpoena them. When we walk into a deposition, the other side knows they can’t use their standard tricks—because we already know them.
Lupe also ensures that our firm is fully bilingual. Hablamos Español. En Brazos Country, muchos trabajadores industriales y de construcción son hispanos. Su estatus migratorio no afecta su derecho a una compensación por una lesión o enfermedad laboral. Llame a Lupe Peña hoy mismo.
Watch Lupe’s guide to deposition preparation here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_qCwqfeRRs
Multiple Compensation Pathways: Leaving No Money on the Table
Most Brazos Country families believe they have to choose between workers’ comp, VA benefits, or a lawsuit. They are wrong. A successful case with Attorney 911 often involves a “Total Recovery Stack”:
- Direct Negligence Lawsuit: Against the product manufacturer or plant operator for unlimited compensatory and punitive damages.
- Asbestos Trust Funds: We file with multiple bankruptcy trusts simultaneously.
- Third-Party Claims: If you were a contractor injured at a Houston-area refinery, you can receive workers’ comp from your boss AND sue the refinery owner for premises liability.
- VA Service-Connected Disability: For Brazos Country veterans, we coordinate your legal claim with your PACT Act or Camp Lejeune benefits.
- Wrongful Death & Survival Actions: If your loved one has already passed, we recover for their pain and suffering before death (survival action) AND your loss of companionship and financial support (wrongful death).
As Ralph discusses in Episode 11 of the podcast, “What is a Million-Dollar Case?”, toxic exposure claims often reach these valuations because medical costs and life-impact damages are so high: https://share.transistor.fm/s/d690a218
Evidence Preservation: The Brazos Country Triage
The moment you are diagnosed in a facility like Houston Methodist or MD Anderson, the clock starts ticking. Not just the legal statute of limitations, but the evidence destruction clock.
We move immediately to preserve:
- Industrial Hygiene Records: Air sampling data that proves the benzene or asbestos levels at your Brazos Country job site.
- OSHA 300 Logs: Every injury and illness recorded by your employer in the last 5 years.
- Product ID: Identifying the specific brand of insulation (Kaylo, Unibestos) or gaskets (Flexitallic) you handled.
- Witness Testimony: Locating retired co-workers who can testify to the dust levels and lack of PPE in the 1970s and 80s.
Stephanie H. wrote in her 5-star review: “She [Leonor] took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders and I just never felt so taken care of.” That is our goal for every Brazos Country family—we handle the corporate giants while you focus on your health.
Resources for Brazos Country Families
Justice is about more than money; it’s about treatment and support. If you are in Brazos Country, you are less than an hour away from the best cancer treatment on the planet.
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston): Consistently ranked #1 in the nation for cancer care. Their Mesothelioma Program is world-renowned. https://www.mdanderson.org
- Southwest Center for Occupational and Environmental Health (UTHealth Houston): One of the few NIOSH-funded research centers in the U.S., specializing in diagnosing work-related diseases. https://sph.uth.edu/research/centers/swcoeh/
- Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center (Houston): Essential for Brazos Country veterans seeking PACT Act screenings for burn pit or asbestos exposure. https://www.va.gov/houston-health-care/
Frequently Asked Questions for Brazos Country Workers
I worked in a Brookshire warehouse but handled chemicals. Can I sue?
Yes. If those chemicals contained benzene, formaldehyde, or other toxins without proper labeling or safety gear, you have a product liability claim against the manufacturer, regardless of your employer’s workers’ comp status.
Is it too late to file if my exposure was at a Sealy plant in 1980?
In Texas, the “Discovery Rule” usually tolls the statute of limitations. Your two-year window typically starts when you were diagnosed and learned the illness was work-related, not when you were first exposed.
My husband died of lung cancer, and he was a smoker. Can we still sue for asbestos?
Yes. Under the “Helsinki Criteria,” asbestos and smoking have a synergistic effect. Asbestos multiplies the risk of lung cancer in smokers by 50x to 90x. The law does not let the asbestos company off the hook just because the victim smoked.
What does “No Fee Unless We Win” really mean for a Brazos Country family?
It means Attorney 911 takes all the financial risk. We pay for the medical experts, the industrial hygienists, and the court filings. If we don’t recover money for you, you never owe us a dime.
Can I file a claim if the company I worked for is now bankrupt?
Yes. Bankruptcy trusts were created specifically for this. Companies like Johns-Manville are “bankrupt,” but their multi-billion dollar trusts are active and paying out claims to workers every day.
How much is my mesothelioma case worth in Brazos Country?
While every case is unique, mesothelioma settlements typically range from $1 million to $1.4 million, with trial verdicts often reaching much higher. We fight for maximum value based on your specific life story.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Case results vary. Principal office: Houston, Texas.
Your Fight Starts in Brazos Country Today
The corporations that poisoned the Brazos Country workforce are counting on you to stay silent. They are counting on the “latency period” to outlive your memory and your will to fight. They are counting on their armies of defense lawyers to overwhelm you.
They haven’t met Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña.
Whether you were a roughneck in the oilfields near Austin County, a pipefitter at an I-10 refinery, or a veteran who served on an asbestos-laden ship, your contribution to this state was invaluable. You held up your end of the bargain. The companies that employed you didn’t.
We are here to balance the scales. We are here to ensure your family’s future is secure and the people who chose profits over your life are held to account.
As Ken T. said in his review: “Ralph Manginello… delivered! Kudos to his great staff.” Let us deliver for you.
Call Attorney 911 at 1-888-ATTY-911. 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Brazos Country’s legal emergency line is open.
Brazos Country Toxic Exposure: Comprehensive FAQ
Q1: Is Brazos Country air or water known to be contaminated?
Brazos Country is in proximity to several industrial hubs, including Sealy and the Houston energy corridor. While community-specific data varies, the Brazos River corridor has a high density of pipeline crossings and historical agricultural pesticide use. If your well water has an unusual smell or your community has a high incidence of rare cancers, environmental testing may be necessary.
Q2: I worked for a railroad near Brazos Country and have lung cancer. What are my rights?
Railroad workers are protected by FELA (Federal Employers Liability Act), not state workers’ comp. If you were exposed to asbestos in brake shoes or diesel exhaust in the yards near Austin County, you can sue the railroad for negligence. FELA has a lower burden of proof than standard negligence law.
Q3: What is “Take-Home” asbestos exposure, and can I sue for it in Texas?
“Take-home” or secondary exposure happens when a worker carries asbestos fibers home on their clothes, hair, or skin, exposing their spouse and children. Texas courts have recognized these claims. If a wife in Brazos Country developed mesothelioma from washing her husband’s work clothes from a refinery, she has a valid legal claim.
Q4: My doctor says I have “pleural plaques.” Is that enough for a lawsuit?
Pleural plaques are calcified deposits on the lung lining. While they are often asymptomatic, they are definitive medical proof of asbestos exposure. While a lawsuit for plaques alone may have lower value than a cancer case, documenting them now is critical if you later develop mesothelioma or asbestosis.
Q5: Can I switch lawyers if my current firm isn’t returning my calls?
Yes. Many Brazos Country clients come to us after being “ghosted” by national mass tort firms. You have the right to an attorney who provides direct communication. As Christopher W. noted, we often do more in 8 weeks than other firms do in a year.
Q6: How do I prove benzene exposure if my job was 30 years ago?
We use “Product Identification” experts and historical plant records. We look at the chemicals produced at your specific site during your specific years of employment. Most major refineries have a “chemical footprint” that we can reconstruct even decades later.
Q7: What are the symptoms of mesothelioma I should look out for?
Initial symptoms often mimic the flu or pneumonia: persistent dry cough, shortness of breath, chest wall pain, and unexplained weight loss. If you have these symptoms and a history of industrial work, see a specialist immediately and mention your asbestos history.
Q8: Does my immigration status matter in an Austin County court?
No. Under Texas law and federal safety regulations, EVERY worker is entitled to a safe workplace. Your right to sue for toxic exposure or an industrial injury is not dependent on your citizenship. Hablamos Español y protegemos sus derechos.
Q9: What is the Camp Lejeune Justice Act and does it apply to me?
If you or a family member lived or worked at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune for at least 30 days between 1953 and 1987, you can sue the government for injuries caused by contaminated water. The deadline is narrowing, so Brazos Country veterans should call 1-888-ATTY-911 immediately.
Q10: How do I know if my Brazos Country employer was a “Non-Subscriber”?
In Texas, an employer can choose not to carry workers’ compensation. If your employer is a non-subscriber, you can sue them directly for negligence, and they lose many of their standard legal defenses. We can verify your employer’s status in minutes.
Q11: Can I get a payout for Parkinson’s disease?
If you worked as a farmer or pesticide applicator in or around Austin County and used the herbicide Paraquat, your Parkinson’s diagnosis may be linked to chemical exposure. Professional applicators have a significantly higher risk of developing PD.
Q12: Why should I hire Attorney 911 instead of a firm I see on a billboard?
Billboard firms are often “referral engines”—they sign you and then sell your case to another firm. At Attorney 911, Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña are your attorneys. You get the 27+ years of experience and the insurance defense insider knowledge directly on your side.
Q13: What happens if the person who was exposed is already deceased?
You can file a “Survival Action” to recover the damages they suffered while alive, and a “Wrongful Death” claim to recover for the family’s loss. These are powerful pathways for Brazos Country families who have lost a breadwinner or a matriarch.
Q14: How are pain and suffering damages calculated for mesothelioma?
There is no fixed formula. We look at the daily reality of the disease—the loss of breath, the inability to play with grandkids in Brazos Country, and the physical agony of the tumor pressing on the chest wall. We frame this for the jury so they understand the human cost of corporate silence.
Q15: Is Roundup still causing cancer?
Yes. Despite ongoing litigation, glyphosate is still used widely. If you used Roundup for landscaping or farming and have non-Hodgkin lymphoma, you may still be eligible to join the mass tort or file an individual claim.
Q16: What is a “B Reader” for chest X-rays?
A B Reader is a physician certified by NIOSH to identify dust-related lung diseases like asbestosis and silicosis that a normal radiologist might miss. We use B Readers to provide the high-level evidence needed to win your case.
Q17: Can I sue for hearing loss from my industrial job?
Yes. If your employer failed to provide adequate hearing protection or conduct noise monitoring as required by OSHA, you may have a claim for noise-induced hearing loss or tinnitus. This is especially common for Brazos Country workers in manufacturing and oilfield service.
Q18: What is “Moral Outrage” in a lawsuit?
When we prove a company knew its product was lethal and hid that fact for 50 years, the jury often feels righteous anger. This leads to “Punitive Damages,” which are meant to punish the company. This is where the largest verdicts come from.
Q19: Does Attorney 911 travel to Brazos Country?
Yes. While our primary office is in Houston, we represent clients across Texas. We can meet you at your home in Brazos Country, at the hospital, or via a secure video consultation. You don’t have to travel when you’re fighting for your life; we come to you.
Q20: What is the “Featherweight” burden of proof in maritime cases?
Under the Jones Act, a maritime worker only has to prove the employer’s negligence played the “slightest part” in the injury. This is a much lower bar than a standard car accident case, making it a very powerful tool for Brazos Country seamen and offshore workers.
Q21: Can I sue for a chemical burn at a refinery?
Yes. Chemical burns often involve failed PPE or improper lockout/tagout (LOTO) procedures. Because these burns often cause permanent scarring and nerve damage, they carry high settlement valuations.
Q22: What is “Rhabdomyolysis” after a trench collapse?
When someone is crushed in a trench, their muscle tissue dies and releases toxins into the blood. This can lead to kidney failure hours after they are rescued. This is why “surface” injuries from a collapse are only the beginning of the legal claim.
Q23: How long will my toxic exposure case take?
Trust fund claims can pay out in 6 to 12 months. Civil litigation takes longer—typically 1 to 3 years. However, if you have a terminal diagnosis, we can file for an “expedited docket” to move your case through the court system in months, not years.
Q24: What if I have some fault for the accident?
In Texas, as long as you are 50% or less at fault, you can still recover compensation. Your award is simply reduced by your percentage of fault. In FELA and Jones Act cases, the rules are even more favorable to the worker.
Q25: Why is Lupe Peña’s background so important?
Lupe was inside the meetings where insurance companies decided how to “delay, deny, and defend” claims. He knows their software, their tactics, and their weaknesses. Having an insider on your side is like having the other team’s playbook before the game.
Q26: Can I sue for a “Near Miss” that caused PTSD?
If you survived a refinery explosion or a major building collapse in Brazos Country and now suffer from documented PTSD, you may have a claim even if your physical injuries were minor. Emotional trauma is just as real as a broken bone in the eyes of the law.
Q27: How do I get a copy of my work history?
We assist with this. We pull Social Security earnings statements, union dispatch logs, and company personnel files to build a comprehensive map of where you were exposed and when.
Q28: Are there trust funds for silica or benzene?
While most trust funds are for asbestos, some companies have established broader settlements. Most benzene and silica cases are handled through traditional civil litigation against solvent manufacturers and operators.
Q29: Can I get compensation for lost inheritance?
Yes. In a wrongful death case, we calculate the financial support and inheritance the victim would have provided to their Brazos Country family had they not been taken early by toxic exposure.
Q30: What is the first step to starting my claim?
Call 1-888-ATTY-911. We’ll listen to your story, check your work history, and tell you exactly what your options are. The consultation is always free, and you owe us nothing until we win.
Attorney 911: Immediate. Aggressive. Professional. We fight for Brazos Country.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today.