For decades, the western industrial sprawl stretching from the Houston Ship Channel out toward the I-10 corridor has provided a livelihood for thousands of families in the City of Industry and throughout Austin County. You likely spent your career as a pipefitter, a railroad engineer, or a construction laborer, fueled by the pride of building the infrastructure that powers Texas. But while you were focused on providing for your family, the corporations that employed you—and the manufacturers of the products you handled every day—were focused on something else: protecting their profit margins from the catastrophic health risks they knew their products caused. Whether you were maintainining BNSF rail lines near Sealy, working at manufacturing hubs in the City of Industry, or commuting to the massive refineries just east of the Austin County line, you were breathing in microscopic silent killers like asbestos fibers, benzene vapors, and crystalline silica dust. Now, you or your loved one has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia, or another life-altering disease, and you are realizing that the company you trusted was never truly on your side.
At Attorney 911, we know that a diagnosis of an occupational disease feels like a betrayal of every year of hard work you gave to the Austin County economy. We are not just a law firm; we are a senior litigation team dedicated to holding these billion-dollar entities accountable for the decades of silence and concealment they maintained. Ralph Manginello, our founding attorney with over 27 years of experience, has seen firsthand the devastation these companies cause—having stood on the front lines of massive industrial litigation like the BP Texas City Refinery explosion cases, which resulted in a $2.1 billion total recovery for victims. We are joined by associate attorney Lupe Peña, a former insurance defense insider who used to work for the firms that defend these corporations. Lupe knows exactly how they attempt to bury evidence, delay your claim, and lowball your settlement because he sat in their strategy meetings. We have taken that “spy from the other side” and put his knowledge to work for you, ensuring that when the corporations try to use their defense playbook in an Austin County courtroom, we already have the countermove ready.
Discovery of Harm: Why You Are Sick Decades Later
If you are a resident of the City of Industry or have spent your life working across Austin County, your illness is not a matter of “bad luck.” It is a physiological response to toxic cellular damage that began many years ago. Many of our clients come to us confused because they haven’t worked in a refinery or on a construction site in twenty or thirty years. They ask, “How can I be sick now?” The answer lies in the science of latency and biopersistence—concepts that the manufacturers of asbestos and benzene understood as early as the 1930s, yet kept hidden from the American workforce.
The Biological Mechanism of Asbestos and Mesothelioma
Asbestos is not just a mineral; it is a microscopic dagger. When you were cutting insulation at an Austin County construction site or replacing gaskets on a locomotive in a Sealy rail yard, you were inhaling fibers invisible to the human eye. These fibers, particularly amphibole varieties like amosite or crocidolite, are needle-like and chemically indestructible. Once inhaled, they penetrate deep into the lower reaches of your lungs, traveling through the alveolar walls until they lodge in the mesothelium—the thin tissue lining your lungs (pleural), your abdomen (peritoneal), or your heart (pericardial).
Your body recognizes these fibers as foreign invaders and sends macrophages—the “clean-up” cells of your immune system—to destroy them. However, because asbestos fibers are biopersistent and often too long for a cell to engulf, your macrophages fail. This is known as “frustrated phagocytosis.” As the macrophages die trying to clear the fibers, they release inflammatory cytokines like TNF-α and IL-1β, triggering a state of chronic, permanent inflammation. Over the course of 15 to 50 years, this constant inflammatory stress generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) that directly attack the DNA of your mesothelial cells. This cellular bombardment eventually causes mutations in the BAP1 and p53 tumor suppressor genes, which are responsible for stopping cancer. Without those “brakes,” the damaged cells begin to divide uncontrollably, forming the malignant tumors known as mesothelioma.
This decades-long process of DNA degradation is why a worker who handled “Unibestos” insulation or “Kaylo” pipe covering in the City of Industry in 1975 is only now being diagnosed in 2026. The latency period is the corporation’s greatest ally; they count on you either forgetting where you were exposed or passing away from other causes before you can hold them accountable. At Attorney 911, we use the “Discovery Rule” to fight back. In Texas, the statute of limitations for your claim generally does not begin until the day you were diagnosed or reasonably should have known your illness was caused by toxic exposure.
Benzene and the Blueprint of Your Blood
For those who worked in the petrochemical corridors near Austin County or handled industrial solvents at manufacturing plants in the City of Industry, the enemy was often benzene. Benzene (C₆H₆) is a sweet-smelling liquid that is a natural component of crude oil. When inhaled or absorbed through the skin, it travels to your liver, where the enzyme CYP2E1 metabolizes it into benzene oxide and then into a devastating toxin called muconaldehyde.
These metabolites travel through your bloodstream and localize in your bone marrow—the factory where your blood is made. Muconaldehyde specifically attacks hematopoietic stem cells, causing chromosomal translocations, particularly the t(8;21) translocation associated with Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML). By rewriting the blueprint of your blood, benzene forces your body to produce “blasts”—immature, non-functioning white blood cells that crowd out healthy cells. If you worked near gasoline, diesel, or industrial degreasers in Austin County and now face a diagnosis of AML, MDS (Myelodysplastic Syndrome), or CLL (Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia), you have been poisoned at the molecular level, and the manufacturer of those chemicals is liable.
You can learn more about how we identify these “million-dollar” case factors by watching Ralph Manginello’s detailed breakdown here:
https://share.transistor.fm/s/d690a218
Your Industry, Your Risks: Axis of Exposure in the City of Industry
Every region has its own industrial fingerprint. In Austin County and the City of Industry, the exposure risks were concentrated in four primary sectors: Railroads, Construction, Agriculture, and Refinery transit. At Attorney 911, we specialize in identifying the “Bridge” cases where a worker’s industry and the specific toxins they handled create multiple pathways for compensation.
FELA Railroad Injuries: Justice for Austin County Rail Workers
The railroad is the lifeblood of the Austin County economy, with major BNSF and Union Pacific lines serving the Sealy and Bellville areas. For a century, however, these railroads operated under a culture of safety negligence. If you are a railroad worker, you are protected by the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA), a powerful 1908 statute (45 U.S.C. §§ 51-60) that allows you to sue your employer for negligence in a way that regular workers’ compensation does not permit.
Railroad workers faced extreme asbestos exposure from locomotive insulation, brake shoes, and steam heating systems. They also faced chronic inhalation of diesel exhaust, a known Class 1 carcinogen that causes lung and bladder cancer. Under FELA, you do not have to prove the railroad was 100% at fault—you only have to prove that their negligence played “any part, even the slightest,” in causing your illness. This is known as the “featherweight” burden of proof, and it is a massive advantage for Austin County rail workers.
Attorney Ralph Manginello explains the legal process for injury claims in this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XwzYymneDVs
Construction and the City of Industry Development Boom
The City of Industry has seen significant commercial and warehouse construction along the I-10 corridor. If you were a tradesman—an insulator, an ironworker, a drywaller, or an electrician—you were likely exposed to asbestos “mud” (joint compound) and fireproofing sprays until the late 1970s and early 1980s. Even if you worked on more modern sites, the cutting of “engineered stone” countertops has created a new epidemic of accelerated silicosis.
If you fell from a defective scaffold at an Austin County job site, or were injured during a crane operation, your direct employer might try to tell you that workers’ comp is your only option. They are often wrong. We specialize in identifying “Third-Party Liability”—claims against the general contractor, the property owner, or the equipment manufacturer. These claims have no damage caps and allow for the recovery of pain and suffering, which your workers’ comp check will never include.
The Agricultural Bridge: Roundup and Paraquat in Austin County
Austin County remains a hub for agriculture, which brings with it a specific set of toxic risks. Monsanto’s Roundup (glyphosate) and Syngenta’s Paraquat have been staple herbicides for local farmers and ranch hands. We now know that Roundup is “probably carcinogenic” to humans (IARC Group 2A), specifically causing Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL). Even more devastatingly, Paraquat has been linked through decades of studies to Parkinson’s Disease; the chemical is taken up by the dopamine-producing neurons in your brain and destroys them through redox cycling, a process that mimic’s the brain damage seen in Parkinson’s patients.
If you were a licensed applicator or farmworker in neighborhoods like Sealy, Bellville, or San Felipe and have since developed Parkinson’s or NHL, you are part of an active mass tort. We leverage the “Monsanto Papers”—internal documents that proved the company ghostwrote safety studies—to show that these manufacturers knew about the risks decades before you were ever warned.
Corporate Betrayal: The Manufacturers Who Knew
You were never meant to get sick. The safety protocols you followed were often based on numbers that the corporations knew were unsafe. At Attorney 911, we hold the “Named Enemies” accountable.
Our team, including Lupe Peña, uses your specific work history to identify which manufacturers’ products were at your Austin County job sites. If you worked at a refinery near the Houston Ship Channel or an industrial site in the City of Industry, you were likely surrounded by products from:
- Johns-Manville: The world leader in asbestos products, which suppressed its own 1933 health studies.
- ExxonMobil and Shell: Which had internal memos regarding benzene leukemia risks as early as the 1940s.
- Owens Corning: Manufacturers of Kaylo insulation, who knew that even low-level exposure could be fatal.
- 3M and DuPont: Makers of “forever chemicals” (PFAS) who hid blood-test data showing the chemicals bioaccumulate in humans.
In 2024, a Pennsylvania jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil for a single benzene cancer case. In late 2025, a Baltimore jury awarded $1.5 billion against Johnson & Johnson for talc-related mesothelioma. While every case is unique and past results do not guarantee future outcomes, these figures prove what happens when a trial attorney like Ralph Manginello puts the facts before a jury.
Ralph discusses the criteria for high-value cases in this podcast episode:
https://share.transistor.fm/s/d690a218
The Insider Advantage: Our Team Against Their Playbook
When you sue a multinational corporation, you aren’t just fighting a company; you are fighting an insurance defense machine. This is where Attorney 911 changes the equation. Lupe Peña spent years on the defense side. He knows their “delay, deny, and defend” tactics. He knows how they try to blame your smoking history for your mesothelioma (even though smoking does not cause mesothelioma) and how they try to say your leukemia is “genetic” rather than benzene-induced.
Because we have a former defense attorney on staff, we don’t just react to their moves—we anticipate them. We take the “spy” from their camp and use him to build your case. We know exactly which documents they try to hide during discovery and which experts they hire to lie to juries.
You can watch Lupe Peña discuss the deposition process and how defense attorneys think here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_qCwqfeRRs
Multiple Compensation Pathways: Maximizing Your Recovery
Most firms in Texas and across the country only look for one way to get you money. At Attorney 911, we look for every possible source of recovery. For a typical City of Industry toxic exposure victim, we pursue the “Full Recovery Stack”:
- Asbestos Bankruptcy Trusts: There are currently over 60 active trusts with roughly $30 billion in remaining assets. These trusts were established by bankrupt companies like Manville and Pittsburgh Corning to pay victims without the need for a trial. We identify every trust you qualify for.
- Civil Lawsuits: We sue the solvent, active companies like John Crane or J&J that are still in business and can be forced to pay full compensatory and punitive damages.
- Workers’ Compensation: We ensure your immediate medical bills are covered through the state system or through Austin County “non-subscriber” negligence claims if your employer opted out of the system.
- VA Benefits: For Austin County veterans exposed at Camp Lejeune or on Navy ships, we coordinate with your VA disability benefits to ensure your civil settlement does not negatively affect your monthly check.
- Wrongful Death and Survival Actions: If you have already lost a loved one, we file both a Wrongful Death claim (for your loss) and a Survival Action (for the suffering they endured before passing).
Attorney Ralph Manginello explains the difference between these types of injuries here:
https://share.transistor.fm/s/1f8970c7
Local Medical Resources for Austin County Residents
While we handle the legal battle, your first priority must be your health. If you have been diagnosed in the City of Industry or Sealy, you are less than an hour away from the most prestigious cancer center in the world:
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston): Located 50 miles east of the City of Industry, MD Anderson is the #1 cancer hospital in the U.S. and has a dedicated Mesothelioma Center. https://www.mdanderson.org
- Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center: Home to the Dan L Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center and world-class thoracic surgeons specializing in EPP and P/D surgeries. https://www.stlukeshealth.org
- Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center (Houston): Essential for Austin County veterans seeking PACT Act screenings and toxic exposure evaluations. https://www.va.gov/houston-health-care/
- Texas Oncology (Katy/West Houston): For those seeking treatment closer to home, Texas Oncology provides expert care just minutes from the Austin County line. https://www.texasoncology.com
The medical records generated at these institutions are the foundation of your legal case. Getting world-class care is the first step in getting world-class justice.
Evidence Preservation: Why the Clock is Ticking in Austin County
In a toxic exposure case, time is your greatest enemy—not just because of the statute of limitations, but because of Spoliation (the destruction of evidence).
- Facilities are closing: Old sites in the City of Industry are being demolished, and with them, the evidence of which insulation was on the pipes and which solvents were in the tanks.
- Witnesses are disappearing: Your former co-workers from the 1970s and 80s are potentially the only ones who can testify to the conditions you worked in.
- Corporate Records are purged: Under federal law, many companies only have to keep safety records for 30 years. If you don’t act now, the documents that prove they knew you were at risk will be legally destroyed.
As Ralph explains in “Is There a Statute of Limitations on My Case?”, once you “should have known” about the cause of your illness, the clock starts.
https://share.transistor.fm/s/bddc1426
What Our Clients Say: The 4.9-Star Advantage
We have earned a 4.9-star rating across 270+ verified Google reviews because we treat our clients like family. As Chad Harris shared in his review: “A true PITT BULL and fighter. He don’t play… Unlike some law firms where you are dealing with an answering service, that’s NOT the case with this firm. Atty. Manginello and I had DIRECT COMMUNICATION.”
Or as Stephanie Hernandez wrote: “Leonor reached out to me and offered her assistance… she just really made me feel like I mattered throughout the entire process.”
We don’t take thousands of cases and throw them against a wall. We take select cases from hard-working people in places like the City of Industry and we fight until we win.
FAQ: Your Questions Answered for Austin County Victims
1. I worked in the City of Industry 40 years ago. Is it too late to file?
No. Under the Texas discovery rule, the two-year statute of limitations generally begins when you are diagnosed with an illness like mesothelioma and learn it was caused by asbestos. Even if your exposure was in 1975, if you were diagnosed last month, your case is likely very much alive.
2. Can I file a claim if my former employer is out of business?
Yes. Many companies that manufactured toxic products or operated dangerous facilities established “Bankruptcy Trusts” specifically to pay future claims. We can identify which trusts are responsible for your exposure even if the physical factory in the City of Industry is long gone.
3. Will this cost me money up front?
Never. We work on a contingency fee basis. This means we advance all the costs of the case—medical experts, investigators, filing fees—and we only get paid if we win you a settlement or verdict. There is zero financial risk to your family.
4. How much is my mesothelioma case worth?
Every case is different, but average mesothelioma settlements range between $1 million and $1.4 million, with many results significantly higher. The value depends on how many defendants we can identify and the impact the disease has had on your life and your Austin County family.
5. My husband was a smoker. Can we still file for asbestos exposure?
Absolutely. Smoking does not cause mesothelioma. For lung cancer cases, it is a scientific fact that asbestos and tobacco smoke have a “synergistic” effect, meaning the two combined create a much higher risk than either alone. The asbestos companies don’t get a free pass because someone smoked; in many ways, they are more liable because they didn’t warn you that their product is even more lethal for smokers.
6. Do I have to go to court?
Most toxic exposure cases settle before trial. However, Ralph Manginello is a trial-ready attorney. We prepare every case as if it is going to a Houston or Austin County jury. When the corporations see our data, they are much more likely to offer a fair settlement.
7. What is “take-home” exposure?
This is when a worker unknowingly carries asbestos fibers or chemicals home on their hair, skin, or uniform. We have successfully represented many wives and children who developed mesothelioma simply from laundering their husband’s or father’s work clothes after his shift in the City of Industry.
8. I am a veteran. Does this affect my VA benefits?
No. Your civil claim is separate from your VA disability. You are entitled to both. We help Austin County veterans navigate both systems to ensure they receive every dollar they deserve.
9. What if I don’t remember the brand of insulation I used?
That’s our job. We maintain a massive database of which products were used at specific sites in the City of Industry and throughout Texas. We also use co-worker testimony and union records to reconstruct your work history and identify the responsible parties.
10. Can I switch lawyers if my current firm isn’t calling me back?
Yes. Many of our clients come to us after feeling like “just a number” at a mass tort mill. If your current firm isn’t providing the direct communication Ralph and Leonor are known for, you have the right to change counsel.
11. What is the “Asbestos Trust Fund”?
It is a pool of over $30 billion set aside by companies like Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and others. These funds are designed to pay out claims quickly. We know how to file with multiple trusts simultaneously to maximize your payout.
12. Does my immigration status matter?
No. Every worker in Texas has the same right to a safe workplace and the same right to seek justice when they are poisoned. We provide bilingual services—Hablamos Español—and our conversations are 100% confidential. Your status is not an issue in your civil claim.
13. How long does a toxic exposure case take?
Trust fund claims can often be resolved in 6 to 12 months. If we file a lawsuit against solvent defendants, it may take 1 to 2 years, though we always push for “preferences” on the court docket for our sickest clients to speed up the process.
14. What are the first symptoms of benzene leukemia?
You might notice extreme fatigue, easy bruising, frequent infections, or unexplained weight loss. If you handled chemicals in Austin County and have these symptoms, you should tell your doctor specifically about your chemical exposure history.
15. Who is responsible for PFAS in my water?
Typically, the manufacturers of the chemicals (like 3M or DuPont) and the industrial facilities that discharged the chemicals into the groundwater. We investigate local water reports for the City of Industry to determine if your community was affected.
16. What is a “Third Party” claim?
If you are injured at work, the “first party” is you and the “second party” is your employer. A “third party” is anyone else—like the manufacturer of a defective crane or the company that made the toxic chemicals you handled. These are the claims that generally yield the most compensation.
17. What is “manganism”?
It is a brain disorder caused by inhaling manganese fumes, often during welding or steel work. It mimics Parkinson’s disease. If you were an Austin County welder and were told you have Parkinson’s, you may actually have manganism caused by your job.
18. Why should I choose Attorney 911?
Because we provide the “Insider Advantage.” With 27 years of Ralph’s experience and Lupe’s background in insurance defense, we offer a specialized level of strategy that general personal injury firms can’t match. We know the science, we know the corridors, and we know our Austin County neighbors.
19. If I hire you, who answers the phone?
You will have direct access to our team. We don’t hide behind call centers. We pride ourselves on the communication that earned us our 4.9-star rating.
20. How do I start?
Call us at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential consultation. We can often evaluate your case over the phone or meet you at your home in Sealy, Bellville, or anywhere in Austin County.
Detailed Coverage: Silica and Engineered Stone (The “Next Asbestos”)
One of the most urgent health crises currently facing workers in the City of Industry and eastern Austin County is the rise of Accelerated Silicosis. For years, the cutting of natural granite and marble was the standard. However, the explosion of popularity in “engineered stone” or quartz countertops has introduced a much deadlier hazard. Engineered stone is made of roughly 93% crystalline silica—compared to natural granite, which is only about 30% silica.
The Mechanism of Alveolar Destruction
When workers in City of Industry fabrication shops cut these quartz slabs without adequate water-suppression or high-grade respiratory protection, they inhale massive amounts of respirable crystalline silica (RCS). These particles are smaller than 5 microns—small enough to reach the gas-exchange regions of your lungs (the alveoli). Once there, the silica particles are engulfed by macrophages. Unlike many other particles, silica is directly cytotoxic to the macrophage; the macrophage dies and ruptures, releasing the silica back into the lung along with inflammatory signals that recruit even more white blood cells.
This creates a self-perpetuating inflammatory loop. Fibroblasts are activated to lay down thick, inelastic collagen (scar tissue). In “accelerated” silicosis, this process happens so rapidly that a worker can go from a clean X-ray to requiring a double-lung transplant in as little as 5 to 10 years. This isn’t the “old man’s lung disease” of the past; we are seeing men in their 20s and 30s across the Greater Houston area losing their lives to this product.
If you worked in a kitchen or bath fabrication shop in the City of Industry or Sealy and now struggle to breathe, you may have a claim against the manufacturers of these slabs—companies like Caesarstone, Cosentino (Silestone), and Cambria. They knew their product was 90%+ silica and failed to warn fabricators of the extreme risks.
Learn about how to document these job sites here:
https://share.transistor.fm/s/a42daf06
FELA: Why Railroad Liability is Different in Sealy and Austin County
Railroad lines define the geography of Austin County. But the railroads—BNSF, Union Pacific, and the legacy lines that preceded them—have a dark history of ignoring worker health. Under the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA), your rights are significantly broader than a standard construction worker’s.
Railroads have a “non-delegable duty” to provide a safe place to work. This means that if a BNSF conductor is injured while walking on ballast at a customer’s industrial site in the City of Industry, the railroad is still liable for failing to inspect that site. Furthermore, the Safety Appliance Act and the Locomotive Inspection Act create “strict liability.” If a locomotive brake or a coupling mechanism fails, the railroad is 100% liable regardless of whether the worker was also being “careless.”
We are currently investigating cases of:
- Railroad Lung Cancer: Linked to decades of inhaling diesel exhaust in rail yards.
- Railroad Mesothelioma: From asbestos brake shoes and pipe insulation.
- Railroad Spine Injuries: From years of whole-body vibration and “rough rides” on locomotives and cabooses.
If you are a member of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees (BMWED) or SMART-TD and have been injured, don’t let the company claims agent talk you into a small settlement. They represent the railroad’s interests—not your family’s.
Ralph Manginello breaks down the “Offshore and Railroad” style of litigation in this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vd_HVPtPf4
Benzene and the Houston Transit Corridor: A Warning for Austin County
Many City of Industry residents spent years working in the transportation of petroleum products. Benzene is a “Group 1” human carcinogen for a reason. There is no safe level of exposure. The OSHA permissible exposure limit (PEL) of 1 part per million (ppm) is not a “health-based” standard; it was a “feasibility-based” standard that industry lobbyists fought for decades.
If you were a tank truck driver, a petroleum inspector, or worked in a loading rack near Sealy or the Port of Houston, you inhaled benzene vapor every day. The science is settled: benzene metabolism causes “double-strand DNA breaks” in your bone marrow cells. This is wait-induced damage. If you have been diagnosed with MDS (a pre-leukemia condition) or AML, the oil companies—ExxonMobil, Shell, Chevron—owe you for the years they spent downplaying this risk.
Lupe Peña, our former defense attorney, has seen how these companies try to hide their old air-monitoring reports. At Attorney 911, we go after those records aggressively. Your employer knew the levels was too high, and we have the team to prove it.
Watch Ralph discuss “What a Million Dollar Case” looks like:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
Construction Accidents: Beyond the Workers’ Comp Cap
The I-10 corridor in the City of Industry is a construction danger zone. While workers’ compensation pays for your medical bills and a portion of your wages, it pays nothing for the loss of your physical mobility, your emotional distress, or the loss of your marriage’s intimacy (consortium) after a catastrophic injury.
If you were hurt because of a subcontractor’s mistake, a general contractor’s failure to secure a trench, or a defective piece of equipment like a crane or harness, you have a Third-Party Claim.
- Trench Collapses: Soil weighs 3,000 lbs per cubic yard. A worker buried in an Austin County trench has only minutes before the weight makes breathing impossible. If there was no shoring or trench box, that is a violation of 29 CFR 1926.652 and clear negligence.
- Scaffold Falls: Under OSHA 1926.451, scaffolds must be inspected by a “Competent Person.” Falling from an improperly built scaffold is often not your fault—it’s a management failure.
- Crane Collapses: Usually caused by overloading or improper soil stability evaluation. In Texas, these cases have resulted in verdicts as high as $860 million.
Ralph’s “Houston Construction Accident Guide” explains these rights in depth:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqYeRjbR9PI
The PACT Act and Camp Lejeune: A Promise to Austin County Veterans
If you are one of the many veterans living in Austin County, we salute your service. But we also know that service may have come with a toxic price.
- Camp Lejeune Water: If you were stationed at the base for at least 30 days between 1953 and 1987, you were likely drinking water contaminated with Trichloroethylene (TCE), Perchloroethylene (PCE), benzene, and vinyl chloride. The Camp Lejeune Justice Act allows you to sue the government for cancers, Parkinson’s, and birth defects.
- Burn Pits: For our younger veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, the PACT Act created a “presumption of service-connection” for 23 different respiratory and cancer conditions.
We coordinate with your VA disability claims to ensure you get the maximum value from all available streams. Your country promised to take care of you after you served; we are here to make them keep that promise.
You can hear more about Ralph and Lupe’s background in fighting for the injured here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hn0P6t59pMA
The Final Step: Your 911 Call for Legal Help
You spent a career building the City of Industry and the communities of Austin County. You did the dirty work, the heavy lifting, and the dangerous shifts. You shouldn’t have to spend your retirement fighting for your life because a corporation chose profit over your health.
When you call Attorney 911, you aren’t getting a call center. You are getting Ralph Manginello and a team of fighters who have stood up to the biggest companies in the world. We offer more than just a lawsuit; we offer the science to prove your case, the insider knowledge to beat their tactics, and the empathy to treat you like a human being.
No fee unless we win. No upfront costs. Direct communication. The corporations that poisoned you have a team of highly-paid lawyers. It’s time you had one too.
Call Attorney 911 at 1-888-ATTY-911 for your free consultation. Whether you are in the City of Industry, Sealy, Bellville, or anywhere in Texas, we are your legal emergency response team. Su lucha es nuestra lucha. Llame ahora: 1-888-288-9911.
Attorney Ralph Manginello and his team at The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC. Principal office: Houston, Texas. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique. Contact us 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911.