City of Helotes Toxic Exposure and Dangerous Industry Injury Lawyers: Fighting for Bexar County Workers and Families
You didn’t know. For twenty years, thirty years, maybe longer—you lived your life in the City of Helotes, raised your family near the scenic Loop 1604 gateway, and went to work every day to provide for your future. Whether you were commuting down Bandera Road into San Antonio’s industrial heart, working the massive construction expansions along the outer loop, or serving at one of our region’s military installations like Lackland Air Force Base, you did your job with pride. Nobody told you the dust you breathed on a job site, the sweet-smelling chemical vapors you inhaled at a refinery specialty plant, or the insulation you handled in older Bexar County buildings would one day try to take your life. Now you have a diagnosis, or you are watching a loved one in the City of Helotes fight for every breath, and you finally know the truth. This wasn’t bad luck. It wasn’t just “getting older.” It was a betrayal by corporations that knew their products were lethal and chose to keep the assembly lines running anyway.
At Attorney 911, we believe that when a corporation poisons a worker in the City of Helotes, they don’t just damage a body—they shatter a family and betray the very community that built their wealth. Lead attorney Ralph Manginello brings more than 27 years of high-stakes litigation experience to your fight, including direct involvements in massive industrial accountability cases like the $2.1 billion BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation. We aren’t a settlement mill that treats your life like a file number; we are a dedicated litigation team that understands the scientific, medical, and corporate history required to win. Backed by associate attorney Lupe Peña, a former insurance defense insider who once saw exactly how the other side tries to suppress toxic exposure claims, we provide a level of counter-intelligence and aggressive advocacy that most “TV lawyers” simply cannot match. If you or a loved one has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, leukemia, or a catastrophic industrial injury, the clock is already ticking. Trust fund assets are depleting, evidence is being destroyed, and the corporations are already preparing their defense. Call us 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential case evaluation.
The Scientific Reality of Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure in Bexar County
For decades, the City of Helotes and the surrounding Bexar County region have seen workers exposed to asbestos in shipyards, power plants, and construction sites. Asbestos is not a single substance but a group of six naturally occurring silicate minerals. While industry lobbyists spent decades claiming chrysotile (white asbestos) was “safer” than amphibole varieties, the medical truth is that every fiber type is a known human carcinogen. To understand why your diagnosis happened decades after you worked a job near Loop 1604 or at the old San Antonio industrial docks, you must understand the biological mechanism of this disease.
Asbestos fibers are microscopic, often measuring five micrometers or longer, yet they are virtually indestructible. When you inhale these fibers, they penetrate deep into the alveolar regions of your lungs or the peritoneal lining of your abdomen. Because of their needle-like shape and chemical composition, they exhibit “biopersistence.” This means your body cannot break them down and your immune system cannot expel them. Your body’s macrophages—the white blood cells designed to engulf and destroy foreign invaders—attempt to consume the asbestos fibers. However, because the fibers are often longer than the cell itself, the macrophage fails in a process called “frustrated phagocytosis.” As the macrophage dies trying to protect you, it releases a cascade of inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1β) and reactive oxygen species (ROS).
This creates a state of permanent, chronic inflammation within the mesothelium, the thin tissue lining of your internal organs. Over 15 to 50 years, this constant oxidative stress damages the DNA of your mesothelial cells, specifically deactivating critical tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and p16. Eventually, these damaged cells undergo malignant transformation, resulting in mesothelioma. There is no “safe” level of asbestos exposure; every fiber you inhaled during a renovation project in the City of Helotes or while working on steam lines contributes to your cumulative dose. The National Cancer Institute confirms that even brief or low-level exposures can trigger these cellular mutations. https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/substances/asbestos/asbestos-fact-sheet
Symptoms and Recognition Triggers for City of Helotes Residents
Many residents in the City of Helotes who were exposed to asbestos during their careers now face the frightening onset of symptoms that are often misdiagnosed as common aging or respiratory issues. If you worked in the trades, served in the military, or handled industrial products, you must be vigilant about the following patterns:
- Pleural Mesothelioma (Lungs): This is the most common form. Early signs include a persistent dry cough, unexplained weight loss, and shortness of breath that worsens over time. You might feel a sharp pain in your chest when taking a deep breath—a symptom known as pleurisy.
- Peritoneal Mesothelioma (Abdomen): If asbestos fibers were swallowed or migrated to the abdominal lining, you might experience severe abdominal swelling (ascites), bowel obstruction, and chronic pain.
- Asbestosis: Unlike cancer, this is a chronic Lung disease where the fibers cause extensive scarring (fibrosis) of the lung tissue. You may hear a “crackling” sound when you breathe, and your fingertips may appear rounded or “clubbed” due to long-term oxygen deprivation.
If you are experiencing these symptoms and have a history of working at Bexar County construction sites, San Antonio shipyards, or military facilities like the former Kelly Air Force Base, you need an immediate medical evaluation from a specialist. The Mays Cancer Center at UT Health San Antonio is an NCI-designated center located just minutes from the City of Helotes, offering some of the most advanced diagnostic tools for asbestos-related diseases. https://cancer.uthscsa.edu/
Why the Time to File a Claim in the City of Helotes is Now
We often hear from workers in the City of Helotes who believe it’s “too late” to seek justice because their exposure happened in the 1970s or 80s. This is a myth that corporate defendants love to perpetuate. Under Texas’s discovery rule, the two-year statute of limitations for toxic exposure typically does not begin until the date you were actually diagnosed or reasonably should have known your illness was caused by asbestos. However, while the law may give you a window, the reality of the trust fund system creates a different kind of urgency.
There are currently more than 60 active asbestos bankruptcy trust funds holding approximately $30 billion in remaining assets. These trusts were established by companies like Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and W.R. Grace to compensate victims without the need for a full trial. But these funds are not infinite. As more victims file claims, the “payment percentage” often drops to preserve the fund for future generations. For example, the Manville Trust, which once paid at a much higher rate, currently pays approximately 5.1% of the total liquidated value of a claim. Waiting even six months to file your claim could mean the difference between receiving a full share and a reduced payout.
Additionally, because mesothelioma carries a median survival of 12 to 21 months, we prioritize “expedited review” for our City of Helotes clients. We move to take your deposition immediately to preserve your testimony before your health declines or witnesses disappear. In this video on the Attorney 911 channel, Ralph Manginello explains the critical importance of the statute of limitations and the discovery rule in Bexar County cases.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today. We work on a contingency fee basis, meaning we advance all costs for medical records and expert witnesses, and you owe us nothing unless we win your case.
Benzene and Industrial Chemical Exposure Along the Bexar County Corridors
While the City of Helotes is known for its natural beauty, many of its residents have spent decades working in the refining and chemical manufacturing sectors that power the South Texas economy. If you were a refinery operator, a tank cleaner, or an industrial painter who commuted to the San Antonio Ship Channel or worked at specialty chemical plants in the region, you were likely exposed to benzene.
Benzene (C₆H₆) is a sweet-smelling, colorless liquid derived from crude oil. It is a fundamental building block of industrial chemistry, but it is also a potent bone marrow toxin. When you inhale benzene vapors, your liver metabolizes the chemical through the CYP2E1 enzyme into benzene oxide and then into a highly reactive compound called muconaldehyde. These metabolites don’t stay in your liver; they travel through your bloodstream and concentrate in your bone marrow, where they attack your hematopoietic stem cells. These are the “master cells” that create your red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets.
Over time, this molecular assault leads to chromosomal translocations—specifically the “t(8;21)” translocation—that triggers Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) or Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS). MDS is a pre-leukemic condition where your bone marrow stops producing functional blood cells. If you have been diagnosed with AML, MDS, or Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma and have a history of working with petroleum products or industrial solvents, your disease is almost certainly the result of professional negligence. OSHA has set a permissible exposure limit (PEL) for benzene at 1 ppm (part per million), but the scientific consensus from organizations like the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) is that there is no safe level of benzene exposure. https://monographs.iarc.who.int/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/mono120.pdf
Holding the Petrochemical Giants Accountable
Refinery operators and chemical manufacturers have known about the leukemia risks of benzene since the 1940s. Yet, in our experience handling refinery accident cases across Texas, we have seen a consistent pattern of companies failing to provide adequate respiratory protection, failing to monitor air quality during tank cleanings, and failing to warn workers about the cumulative risks of low-level exposure.
In 2024, a Pennsylvania jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil—a company with a massive presence in Texas—to a former worker who developed leukemia after years of benzene exposure. This verdict proves that juries are tired of corporate excuses. Whether you were exposed at a facility in Bexar County or while working on a long-term turnaround project at a Gulf Coast refinery, you have the right to hold these companies responsible. Lupe Peña, our associate attorney and former insurance defense insider, spent years seeing how companies like Exxon and Shell try to blame a worker’s “lifestyle” or “genetics” for their cancer. We use that insider knowledge to shut down those defenses before they can damage your case.
As Ralph Manginello explains in this YouTube guide to refinery accidents, industrial giants have teams of lawyers on retainer to protect their profits. You deserve a litigation team in the City of Helotes that is ready to strike back.
Construction Site Injuries and Third-Party Liability on Loop 1604
The City of Helotes has been at the center of one of the largest construction booms in Texas history. The ongoing expansion of Loop 1604, the reconstruction of the I-10 interchange, and the massive commercial developments along Bandera Road have brought thousands of tradespeople to our area. But with this growth comes a deadly reality: construction remains the most dangerous industry in the United States.
Many workers in the City of Helotes are told by their employers that “workers’ comp is all you can get” after an injury. This is often a lie designed to protect the company’s bottom line. While you generally cannot sue your direct employer if they carry workers’ compensation insurance, you have a powerful right to file third-party liability claims against other entities on the job site. This is critical because workers’ comp only pays a fraction of your lost wages and offers zero compensation for pain, suffering, or mental anguish.
Scaffold Falls and Gravity-Related Catastrophes
Falls are the leading cause of death in the construction industry, accounting for more than 33% of all fatalities. On major projects near the City of Helotes, multiple contractors are often working on top of each other. If a different subcontractor improperly erected a scaffold, if a site owner failed to provide mandated fall protection systems, or if a manufacturer sold a defective safety harness, you can sue those entities for uncapped damages.
OSHA standard 29 CFR 1926.451 sets strict requirements for scaffold capacity, decking, and guardrails. https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1926/1926.451. When these regulations are ignored to speed up a project along Loop 1604, and a worker falls, the anatomical damage is often permanent. We handle cases involving traumatic brain injuries (TBI), spinal cord contusions leading to paralysis, and “crush syndrome.” In a fall from 20 feet, your body impacts the ground with thousands of pounds of force, causing internal organ rupture and complex fractures that may never fully heal.
Crane Collapses and Heavy Equipment Failure
As high-rise developments and massive highway flyovers dominate the San Antonio/Helotes skyline, crane safety is paramount. A crane collapse is never an “accident”; it is the result of a failure in mechanical integrity, ground stability assessment, or load-chart compliance. In 2023, a Harris County jury highlighted the severity of these events by awarding $28 million following a preventable industrial failure. In the City of Helotes, where wind gusts can be unpredictable near the Hill Country, failure to monitor weather conditions per OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1412 is a common act of negligence.
If you were injured by a crane, a forklift, or a “struck-by” incident at a Bexar County job site, we move to preserve the “black box” data and maintenance logs immediately. In this podcast episode, Ralph Manginello discusses how we identify “million-dollar cases” in the construction industry and what it takes to win them.
Hablamos Español. Llame a Lupe Peña al 1-888-ATTY-911 para una consulta gratis. Su estatus migratorio NO afecta sus derechos legales en el estado de Texas.
PFAS “Forever Chemicals” and Military Base Contamination near Helotes
For the many active-duty personnel and veterans who call the City of Helotes home, the threat of toxic exposure didn’t just happen in a combat zone—it happened in the water you drank and the foam you used for training. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a group of synthetic chemicals used in Aqueous Film-Forming Foam (AFFF) for firefighting and in various industrial processes.
PFAS are known as “forever chemicals” because their carbon-fluorine bonds are the strongest in organic chemistry. Once they enter your body, they bioaccumulate, sticking to proteins in your blood and accumulating in your liver and kidneys. They have a half-life of years, meaning even if your exposure stopped today, the chemicals would remain in your system for a decade. Scientific studies, including those by the C8 Science Panel, have confirmed “probable links” between PFAS exposure and kidney cancer, testicular cancer, ulcerative colitis, and thyroid disease. https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/pfas/health-effects/index.html
The Lackland and JBSA Connection
Recent testing has identified PFAS contamination in and around major San Antonio military installations, including Lackland Air Force Base and Randolph AFB. If you lived on base or worked as a military firefighter near the City of Helotes, you were likely exposed to AFFF during routine training exercises. The manufacturers—including 3M and DuPont—knew about the bioaccumulation risks of these chemicals as early as the 1970s and buried the research.
The EPA recently finalized a National Primary Drinking Water Regulation setting the maximum contaminant level (MCL) for PFOA and PFOS at just 4.0 parts per trillion (ppt). To put that in perspective, that is the equivalent of four grains of salt in an Olympic-sized swimming pool. This reflects the reality that there is no safe level for these toxins. https://www.epa.gov/sdwa/and-polyfluoroalkyl-substances-pfas. If you have a diagnosis and lived or served in a PFAS-impacted area near the City of Helotes, you may be entitled to significant compensation through ongoing multidistrict litigation (MDL 2873).
Camp Lejeune Justice Act (CLJA) for Helotes Veterans
Many Marines and sailors retired to the City of Helotes after serving at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune between 1953 and 1987. For decades, the water at that base was contaminated with trichloroethylene (TCE), benzene, and vinyl chloride at levels up to 300 times the safety limit. The Camp Lejeune Justice Act of 2022 finally allows victims to sue the federal government for these injuries. The filing window is closing soon, and thousands of administrative claims are currently being processed. If you have bladder cancer, Parkinson’s disease, or kidney failure tied to your service at Lejeune, Attorney 911 can help you secure your share of the billions in settlements currently being approved.
The Corporate Concealment: Why Your Anger is Justified
The most difficult part of a toxic exposure diagnosis in the City of Helotes isn’t just the physical pain—it’s the realization that it was preventable. When we litigate these cases, we rely on historical documents that prove a massive conspiracy to value shareholder profits over human life.
In 1935, Sumner Simpson, the president of Raybestos-Manhattan, wrote a now-infamous letter to his counterpart at Johns-Manville regarding the suppression of asbestos research. “I think the less said about asbestos, the better off we are,” he wrote. For the next fifty years, the industry funded “junk science” to claim that white asbestos was harmless, while their own internal medical departments were documenting workers dying of mesothelioma.
Similarly, the “Monsanto Papers” revealed that the manufacturer of Roundup (glyphosate) ghostwrote scientific studies to maintain a “safe” image for a herbicide that IARC classified as “probably carcinogenic to humans” in 2015. https://publications.iarc.who.int/549. Juries across America have responded to this concealment with massive punitive damages, including a recent $2.25 billion verdict in Pennsylvania.
At Attorney 911, we use these documents to tell your story to a jury. We show them that while you were working hard in the City of Helotes and Bexar County, these corporations were calculation-driven, choosing exactly how many lives they were willing to sacrifice to keep their stock price up.
Counter-Intelligence: Dealing with the Insurance Defense Machine
If you file a claim against a major corporation for toxic exposure in the City of Helotes, they won’t simply apologize and send a check. They will deploy a defense infrastructure designed to make you give up. This is where Lupe Peña’s background as a former insurance defense attorney becomes your greatest advantage.
Lupe knows their entire playbook:
- The “Alternative Cause” Defense: They will comb through thirty years of your medical records looking for a single cigarette or a family history of cancer to blame for your mesothelioma.
- The “Product Identification” Trap: They will demand you prove exactly which brand of insulation or floor tile you touched in 1974. We counter this by using industrial hygienists and union local records to reconstruct your work history.
- The Terminal Delay: They know that for diseases like AML or mesothelioma, time is the enemy. They will file endless motions to delay your trial date, hoping you pass away before you can testify. We fight this by filing for “Trial Preference” and expedited dockets in Bexar County courts to ensure your day in court happens while you can see it.
In this video, Lupe Peña explains how to handle deposition questions from defense attorneys who are trying to trick you into damaging your own case.
Compensation Pathways: Maximizing Your Recovery in Helotes
Most toxic exposure victims in the City of Helotes are entitled to multiple simultaneous sources of compensation. Our strategy is to exhaust every single one of them.
| Pathway | Potential Value | Why It Applies to You |
|---|---|---|
| Asbestos Trust Funds | $50,000 – $400,000+ | Fast payouts from bankrupt companies (Johns-Manville, USG, etc.) |
| Personal Injury Lawsuit | $1M – $10M+ | Suing solvent companies like John Crane or J&J for full damages |
| VA Disability | Monthly Payment | Veterans with service-connected exposure (PACT Act, CLJA) |
| FELA Railroad Claims | $500,000 – $5M+ | For railroad workers exposed to asbestos and diesel exhaust |
| Third-Party Tort | Uncapped Damages | Suing manufacturers of defective building materials or site owners |
Settlement ranges for mesothelioma typically average between $1 million and $1.4 million, but trial verdicts can be much higher. In December 2025, a Baltimore jury awarded $1.5 billion against Johnson & Johnson for a single case. While past results don’t guarantee future outcomes, they demonstrate that when we hold these corporations’ feet to the fire, the results can be life-changing for your family.
Step-by-Step Evidence Preservation for City of Helotes Clients
If you suspect you have an exposure claim, you must act before the evidence is shredded. Attorney 911 moves within 48 hours of retention to:
- Send Preservation Demands: We prevent your former employers in Bexar County from destroying safety logs, OSHA 300 reports, and industrial hygiene air sampling data.
- Subpoena Union Records: Union dispatch logs often contain the only record of which specific jobs you were assigned to 40 years ago.
- Capture Product Evidence: We identify purchase orders and manufacturer labels from buildings you worked in along Loop 1604 and Bandera Road.
- Independent Medical Review: We don’t rely on the “company doctor.” We provide your records to independent pathologists who specialize in identifying the specific biomarkers of toxic damage.
As Ralph Manginello explains in this guide to evidence documentation, your smartphone and your memory are your first lines of defense. Write down the names of everyone you worked with while your memory is clear—witness testimony is the cornerstone of a successful case.
Case Type Deep Dive: FELA Railroad Worker Injuries near Helotes
The railroad industry has a long history in Bexar County, and many City of Helotes residents have spent their careers working for Union Pacific or BNSF. Unlike other workers, railroad employees are not covered by state workers’ comp. Instead, you have the right to sue under the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA).
FELA is a much more powerful tool than workers’ comp because it allows for full jury trials and damages for pain and suffering. Most importantly, FELA uses a “relaxed causation” standard. You don’t have to prove the railroad was 100% at fault—only that their negligence played any part, however small, in your injury or cancer.
Railroad workers were exposed to massive amounts of asbestos in locomotive brake shoes, diesel exhaust in the railyards, and herbicides along the tracks. If you are a railroad retiree in the City of Helotes diagnosed with lung cancer or leukemia, you have a direct path to recovery that most people never realize exists. Ralph Manginello discusses the unique nature of these “million-dollar” industrial cases in this episode of the Attorney 911 podcast.
Why Choose Attorney 911? The Helotes Advocate You Need
You have hundreds of choices when searching for a lawyer. But when your life is on the line, you don’t need a billboard—you need a beast.
- We provide direct access: You get Ralph Manginello’s personal cell phone number. You aren’t just another file in a cabinet; you are family.
- We have the pedigree: Ralph’s 27+ years and federal court admission mean we can take your case all the way to a verdict.
- We have the insider edge: Lupe Peña knows the insurance defense traps because he was once the one setting them.
- We are local: We know Bexar County. We know the judges, we know the industrial sites, and we know the heart of the City of Helotes.
As Chad Harris shared in his verified Google review: “A true PITT BULL and fighter. He don’t play! Unlike some law firms where you are dealing with an answering service… Atty. Manginello and I had DIRECT COMMUNICATION. You are NOT a pest to them… You are FAMILY to them.”
Join the 270+ clients who have rated Attorney 911 4.9 out of 5 stars on Google. Let us turn your diagnosis into a demand for justice.
Frequently Asked Questions for City of Helotes Residents
Q: Can I file a claim if my exposure happened 40 years ago?
Yes. Mesothelioma and benzene-related cancers have latency periods of 10 to 50 years. The discovery rule in Texas means your legal clock usually starts when you are diagnosed, not when you were exposed. Many of our clients in the City of Helotes are just now realizing that a job they had in the 1970s is the cause of their illness today.
Q: Will I have to go to court?
Most toxic exposure cases and trust fund claims settle without you ever having to step inside a courtroom. However, we prepare every case as if it is going to trial. By showing the defendants we are ready to win in front of a Bexar County jury, we force them to offer much larger settlements.
Q: What if the company I worked for is bankrupt?
This is actually a common scenario in asbestos litigation. More than 60 companies have established bankruptcy trusts specifically to pay victims like you. Even if the factory or shipyard where you worked is a vacant lot today, the trust funds are still active and paying out millions every month.
Q: Is it expensive to hire a toxic exposure lawyer?
At Attorney 911, we work on a contingency fee basis. This means we charge no upfront fees and we cover all the costs of investigating your case, hiring experts, and filing lawsuits. If we don’t win your case and recover money for you, you owe us absolutely nothing. There is zero financial risk to you.
Q: Can I sue if I was a smoker?
Yes. Smoking does not cause mesothelioma. If a company exposed you to asbestos, they are 100% liable for that diagnosis. For lung cancer, smoking and asbestos together create a “synergistic effect” that multiplies your risk by 50 to 90 times. The law says the company must take you as they find you—smoking history doesn’t let them off the hook for poisoning your lungs.
Q: Do I qualify for the Camp Lejeune settlement?
If you lived or worked at Camp Lejeune for at least 30 cumulative days between August 1, 1953, and December 31, 1987, and have a qualifying diagnosis (bladder cancer, kidney cancer, leukemia, Parkinson’s, etc.), you qualify. This applies to military personnel, civilian workers, and their family members.
Q: Who is the best doctor in San Antonio for mesothelioma?
We strongly recommend a consultation at the Mays Cancer Center at UT Health San Antonio. As an NCI-designated cancer center, they offer specialized surgical procedures like EPP and P/D that many local municipal hospitals cannot perform. https://cancer.uthscsa.edu/
Q: How much is my benzene case worth?
Benzene case values depend on your diagnosis and exposure duration. Settlements for AML often reach into the high six and low seven figures. Recent verdicts against oil companies have reached as high as $725 million.
Q: Does my immigration status matter?
No. Your right to a safe workplace and your right to sue a company that poisoned you is protected by US law regardless of your citizenship or immigration status. We handle cases for all residents of the City of Helotes with total confidentiality and provide bilingual services to ensure you are fully protected.
Q: What is the first thing I should do after a diagnosis?
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 and speak with Ralph. Before you start treatment and your medical bills begin to pile up, you need a legal plan to preserve evidence and secure your family’s financial future.
Educational Resources and Treatment Infrastructure for Helotes Residents
If you are fighting a toxic exposure disease, you need a world-class team. Beyond the Mays Cancer Center, City of Helotes residents are within driving distance of:
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston): Consistently ranked #1 in the world for cancer care. They pioneered the surgical approaches used to treat mesothelioma today. https://www.mdanderson.org
- Southwest Center for Occupational and Environmental Health (UTHealth Houston): One of only ~20 NIOSH-funded research centers in the country. Their specialists can provide the “B Reader” certifications and exposure assessments required to win a case. https://sph.uth.edu/research/centers/swcoeh/
- The Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation: A national non-profit providing clinical trial matching and support for families. https://www.curemeso.org
- Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS): Offers financial assistance and peer support for those fighting benzene-related blood cancers. https://www.lls.org
Conclusion: Taking Back Control of Your Future
The corporations that built their empires on the backs of City of Helotes workers thought you would never find out. They thought that by the time you got sick, the records would be gone and you’d be too tired to fight. They were wrong.
You have 27+ years of trial experience, a former insurance defense insider, and the full weight of Attorney 911 standing behind you. We know what they did. We know how to prove it. And we know how to make them pay for every single day of pain they’ve caused your family.
Whether you are in the City of Helotes, elsewhere in Bexar County, or anywhere in Texas, your fight for justice starts with one call. We are available 24/7. We answer your questions. We investigate your job sites. We fight the corporate defense machine. And we don’t stop until we have secured everything you are entitled to.
Don’t wait for the trust funds to deplete further. Don’t wait for another witness to pass away. Don’t let their silence be the final word on your life.
Call Attorney 911 at 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911) right now. Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña are ready to take your case. Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Principal office: Houston, Texas.