From the Haynesville Shale to the Piney Woods: Holding Corporations Accountable for City of Jacksonville Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injuries
You didn’t know. For twenty or thirty years, you drove along US-69 and US-79, showed up to the job sites that built the City of Jacksonville, and did the hard work that East Texas is known for. Nobody told you the dust you breathed while working in Cherokee County manufacturing plants or the chemicals you handled while maintaining pipelines in the Haynesville Shale would one day try to kill you. You were proud to provide for your family. You were proud to be part of the backbone of the Texas economy. But while you were doing your part, the multi-billion dollar corporations you worked for were doing something else: they were watching their own internal studies prove their products and workplaces were lethal, and they were choosing to keep that information in a filing cabinet.
The cough likely started as a nuisance you dismissed as allergies or cedar fever. Then came the shortness of breath that wouldn’t go away, the fatigue that sleep couldn’t fix, or a diagnosis—mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia, or silicosis—that sounded like a word you’d only hear on a television commercial. Suddenly, your history in the City of Jacksonville doesn’t look like a career anymore. It looks like a countdown. We are Attorney 911, and we have spent decades proving that your illness isn’t bad luck. It is the documented result of corporate negligence.
Ralph Manginello has spent 27 years in the trenches of the Texas legal system holding these companies accountable. Our firm doesn’t just “handle” cases; we litigate them at the highest level, backed by Ralph’s experience in the landmark BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation—a case that resulted in $2.1 billion in total compensation. We understand the industrial landscape of East Texas because we live it. When you call 1-888-ATTY-911, you aren’t reaching a call center or a referral mill. You are reaching a team that includes Lupe Peña, a former insurance defense attorney who used to evaluate these exact claims for the other side. Lupe knows the playbook the insurance companies and corporate defense firms use to deny your rights in Cherokee County, and he uses that insider knowledge to break their defenses.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes, but the data is undeniable. Juries have awarded hundreds of millions of dollars to people exactly like you—workers who were treated as expendable by the companies they served. Whether you were exposed to asbestos in legacy manufacturing plants near the City of Jacksonville, handled benzene-laden process streams in oilfield operations, or were injured in a construction accident on a local job site, you have rights that extend far beyond a limited workers’ compensation check. The corporations that poisoned you have a team of lawyers. Now you have one too. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential case evaluation.
The Science of Betrayal: How Asbestos Destroys the Body at the Cellular Level
Asbestos isn’t a single substance. It is a family of silicate minerals used for decades in City of Jacksonville industrial sites because of its heat resistance and durability. But that same durability makes it a biological nightmare. When you cut Kaylo insulation at a local plant or stripped gaskets in a boiler room, you released microscopic fibers into the air. These fibers—specifically the needle-like amphibole fibers like Amosite or Crocidolite—are measuring five micrometers or longer. They are invisible to the naked eye, but once inhaled, they penetrate deep into the alveolar regions of your lungs.
Your body’s immune system recognizes these fibers as foreign invaders. Macrophages, the specialized cells responsible for cleaning debris from your lungs, attempt to engulf and destroy the asbestos. But here is the biological tragedy: the fibers are too long and too sharp for the macrophage to consume. This leads to a process called “frustrated phagocytosis.” The macrophage essentially dies while trying to eat the fiber, releasing a toxic cocktail of inflammatory cytokines, including TNF-α and IL-1β, directly into your lung tissue. This isn’t a one-time event. Because asbestos is “biopersistent,” these fibers stay in your system for 40 or 50 years, causing chronic, permanent inflammation.
This constant inflammatory state generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) that relentlessly attack the DNA of your mesothelial cells—the thin lining that protects your lungs and abdomen. Over decades, this oxidative stress causes a cascade of genetic mutations. Specifically, it deactivates critical tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and CDKN2A (p16). Without these genetic “brakes,” your cells begin to divide uncontrollably. By the time a City of Jacksonville doctor finds a tumor on a CT scan, the damage has been accumulating for 30 years.
There is no safe level of asbestos exposure. Every fiber you inhaled at a job site in Cherokee County contributed to a cumulative dose that increased your risk of cancer. Attorney Ralph Manginello has spent his career proving this mechanism of causation in courtrooms across the state. We don’t let companies hide behind “low level” exposure defenses. We use the science of biopersistence to show that the fibers they sold you are the same ones killing you now.
For more information on the National Cancer Institute’s findings on asbestos risk, visit: https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/substances/asbestos/asbestos-fact-sheet
Mesothelioma: Recognizing the Symptoms of a Latent Disaster in Jacksonville
If you worked in the trades around the City of Jacksonville between 1960 and 1990—as a pipefitter, an insulator, a boilermaker, or a mechanic—you were likely feet away from asbestos products every single day. The problem is that mesothelioma doesn’t announce its arrival. It hides behind a latency period of 20 to 50 years. You could have been exposed at a plant near the Neches River in 1975 and not feel a single symptom until 2026.
We want you to look closely at these symptoms. Most mesothelioma patients in Texas are initially misdiagnosed with pneumonia, bronchitis, or “old age.” Do not make that mistake. If you have a history of industrial work in Cherokee County, these symptoms are red flags:
- Progressive Shortness of Breath (Dyspnea): This often starts during exertion, like walking to your truck or gardening, but eventually happens even when you’re sitting in your living room in Jacksonville.
- Pleural Effusion: This is a buildup of fluid between the layers of your lung lining. It causes sharp chest pain that worsens when you take a deep breath.
- Persistent Dry Cough: A cough that doesn’t produce phlegm and doesn’t go away with over-the-counter medicine.
- Unexplained Weight Loss: Losing 15 to 20 pounds in a few months without trying.
- Night Sweats and Fatigue: Waking up with soaked sheets and feeling exhausted after a full night’s sleep.
If you have these symptoms, you must tell your doctor about your history of asbestos exposure. A simple X-ray might show pleural thickening or calcified plaques—telltale markers that the asbestos fibers you breathed in decades ago are now causing medical damage. MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, just a few hours’ drive from the City of Jacksonville, has one of the world’s leading mesothelioma programs. They specialize in the multimodal therapy—combining surgery, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy—that provides the best chance for survival.
Ralph Manginello explains the criteria for high-value cases in this podcast episode: https://share.transistor.fm/s/d690a218
Benzene and the Haynesville Shale: The Molecular Attack on Your Bone Marrow
The City of Jacksonville sits in the heart of East Texas energy production. If you worked in the Haynesville Shale, maintained pipelines running through Cherokee County, or worked in local fuel storage and transportation, you handled benzene. Benzene is a colorless, sweet-smelling chemical that is a natural component of crude oil and gasoline. It is also a potent human carcinogen that targets your bone marrow.
When you inhale benzene vapors at a job site, your liver metabolizes the chemical using an enzyme called CYP2E1. This process transforms benzene into benzene oxide and eventually into muconaldehyde and hydroquinone. These metabolites are highly toxic. They travel through your bloodstream and concentrate in your bone marrow—the “factory” where your body creates blood cells. Once there, they bind to the DNA of your hematopoietic stem cells, causing specific chromosomal translocations—specifically t(8;21) or inv(16).
These genetic “glitches” transform healthy stem cells into leukemia cells. This leads to conditions like Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) or Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS). In MDS, your bone marrow stops producing enough healthy blood cells, often leading to a total failure known as aplastic anemia before progressing to full-blown cancer. The industry has known about this link for over 50 years. In 2024, a Pennsylvania jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil for a mechanic who developed AML after benzene exposure. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes, but they prove that when the science is presented correctly, juries hold these giants accountable.
The OSHA permissible exposure limit (PEL) for benzene is 1 part per million (ppm), but the scientific community, including NIOSH, recognizes that even 1 ppm is too high. Many workers in the City of Jacksonville were exposed to concentrations 10 or 20 times that limit during tank cleaning or pipeline maintenance. If you have been diagnosed with leukemia after a career in the oil and gas industry, you don’t have a medical mystery. You have a legal claim. Call Attorney 911 at 1-888-ATTY-911.
Read the ATSDR’s full toxicological profile on benzene exposure here: https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp3.pdf
The Corporate Concealment: They Knew, They Hid It, and You Paid the Price
This is the part that should make you angry. The suffering you or your loved one is enduring in the City of Jacksonville was entirely preventable. The corporations that manufactured these products didn’t just ignore the risks—they actively conspired to hide them.
As early as 1935, the president of Raybestos-Manhattan, Sumner Simpson, wrote a letter to the vice president of Johns-Manville about the “evils” of asbestos. The reply from Vandiver Brown remains one of the most damning documents in legal history: “I think the less said about asbestos, the better off we are.” Those companies continued to sell asbestos-containing products for another 40 years without a single warning label. They watched their own workers die of asbestosis and mesothelioma in their factories while they marketed those same products to you.
The same pattern exists with benzene. Companies like Shell, Chevron, and ExxonMobil had internal medical reports in the 1940s and 50s stating that “the only absolutely safe concentration for benzene is zero.” Yet, they fought tooth and nail against the 1987 OSHA regulation that finally lowered the exposure limit. They chose the cost of litigation over the cost of safety.
At Attorney 911, we use these documents—the “Sumner Simpson letters,” the “Monsanto Papers,” and the internal 3M memos—to destroy the “we didn’t know” defense. Ralph Manginello knows where the bodies are buried in these corporate archives. We don’t just ask them for records; we subpoena the specific board minutes and internal medical studies they thought would never see the light of day. For Lupe Peña, our former insurance defense insider, seen these tactics from the other side. He knows how they try to spin the narrative, and he knows how to cut through their lies for our City of Jacksonville clients.
Multiple Compensation Pathways: Maximizing Your Recovery in Jacksonville
One of the biggest mistakes a toxic exposure victim can make is thinking they only have one way to get paid. Most firms will either file a workers’ comp claim or a single lawsuit. We do things differently. A single mesothelioma diagnosis or leukemia case for a City of Jacksonville worker can trigger four or five separate sources of compensation simultaneously. This is how we maximize the money that goes into your pocket to pay for MD Anderson bills and provide for your family.
1. Asbestos Bankruptcy Trust Funds
There are more than 60 active asbestos trust funds in the United States, holding approximately $30 billion in remaining assets. These trusts were created by companies like Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and W.R. Grace after they filed for bankruptcy to manage their asbestos liability. You do not have to go to court to get money from these trusts. If we can prove you worked with their products—which we do through your work history and co-worker affidavits—you can receive payments within months. Average total recovery from multiple trusts often ranges from $300,000 to $400,000 for mesothelioma victims, depending on their work history.
2. Civil Lawsuits (Personal Injury or Wrongful Death)
Many asbestos and chemical companies never went bankrupt. Companies like John Crane Inc. or the manufacturers of benzene-containing solvents are still solvent and can be sued directly. A jury verdict or a pre-trial settlement from a solvent defendant is typically much higher than a trust fund payment. In 2025, a Baltimore jury awarded $1.5 billion for a single mesothelioma case. While every case is different, we pursue these massive corporations with the full force of 27 years of trial experience.
3. Workers’ Compensation and Third-Party Claims
If you were injured in an industrial explosion at a City of Jacksonville facility or a construction accident on US-69, your employer might have told you that workers’ comp is your “exclusive remedy.” That is often a lie. You can receive workers’ comp benefits AND file a “third-party” lawsuit against the manufacturer of the defective crane, the contractor who failed to shore up the trench, or the property owner who ignored safety hazards. Third-party claims have no damage caps and allow you to recover for pain and suffering—which workers’ comp will never pay you for.
4. VA Disability and Federal Programs
For the many veterans in the City of Jacksonville, we also look at service-connected pathways. Under the PACT Act of 2022, veterans exposed to burn pits or contaminated water at Camp Lejeune have unprecedented rights to compensation. We help you navigate these federal programs to ensure you are receiving the monthly disability checks you earned while also pursuing civil damages against the contractors who poisoned you.
Ralph Manginello explains the contingency fee structure—where you pay nothing unless we win—in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc
Dangerous Industries in Jacksonville: The Axis of Workforce Risk
The City of Jacksonville serves as a hub for several high-risk industries. If you work in one of these “Fatal Four” sectors, your risk of a life-altering injury or toxic exposure is significantly higher than the average Texan. We focus our practice on the workers in these fields:
Onshore Oilfield and Pipeline Workers
Jacksonville is a gateway to the East Texas energy boom. Roughnecks, derrickhands, and pipeline welders in our community face daily risks that most people can’t imagine. We handle cases involving:
- Blowouts and Well-Control Events: High-pressure releases that cause devastating fires and crush injuries.
- Silical Exposure: If you handled proppant sand during fracking operations, you inhaled crystalline silica. This dust causes accelerated silicosis—scarring of the lungs that can require a double lung transplant.
- H2S Gas Exposure: Hydrogen sulfide is a silent killer in East Texas. Just a few breaths at high concentration can lead to immediate respiratory failure and death.
Construction and Laborers
As the City of Jacksonville grows and the infrastructure along US-79 expands, construction accidents are rising.
- Trench Collapses: A single cubic yard of Cherokee County soil weighs as much as a small car (3,000 lbs). If an employer failed to shore up a trench deeper than five feet, they violated 29 CFR 1926 Subpart P. We hold them accountable for the resulting asphyxiation and crush injuries.
- Scaffold Falls: Occupational falls are the leading cause of death in construction. We identify the third-party liability—defective equipment or inadequate safety netting—that allows for full tort recovery.
Manufacturing and Warehouse Workers
Jacksonville’s history of plastics and manufacturing has left a legacy of exposure.
- Formaldehyde and Ethylene Oxide: Used in sterilization and manufacturing, these chemicals are Group 1 carcinogens. If you were a chemical operator at a local plant and were diagnosed with leukemia, we investigate the ventilation records and safety logs the company doesn’t want you to see.
- Industrial Explosions: Ralph Manginello’s experience in the BP Texas City refinery case is the gold standard for industrial accident litigation. We know how to investigate a process safety management (PSM) failure to prove that “accidents” are actually the predictable result of deferred maintenance and corporate greed.
Listen to Ralph discuss the process of a personal injury claim: https://share.transistor.fm/s/8babce5d
The Discovery Rule: Why Your Decade-Old Exposure in Jacksonville Still Matters
One of the most common things we hear at Attorney 911 is: “It happened so long ago, I probably missed my chance to sue.” In many cases, that is wrong. Texas follows the “Discovery Rule” for toxic tort and latent disease claims.
Under the discovery rule, the two-year statute of limitations for your case does NOT necessarily start on the day you were exposed to asbestos or benzene in the 1980s. It starts on the day you were diagnosed or the day you reasonably should have known that your illness was caused by that exposure. For a mesothelioma patient in the City of Jacksonville, this means the clock might not start until the day the oncologist delivers the biopsy results.
However, once you are diagnosed, the clock moves fast. Evidence in toxic exposure cases is extremely sensitive to time.
- Witnesses: Your former co-workers from the 1970s and 80s are aging. We need to take their depositions now to preserve their testimony about the dust levels and missing PPE at your old work site.
- Company Records: Corporations dissolve. Facilities are demolished along the Neches. Records are “accidentally” shredded. We move immediately to send spoliation letters that legally require your former employers to preserve every industrial hygiene report and OSHA log related to your career.
- Trust Fund Assets: Asbestos bankruptcy trusts are not bottomless pits. As more people file claims, the payment percentages can go down. Locking in your claim now ensures you get the maximum value allowed by the trust.
Do not wait. As Chad H. wrote in his verified 5-star Google review: “Atty. Manginello stepped in and absolutely fought for us. A true PITT BULL and fighter. He don’t play!” You need that level of aggression when you are fighting against the clock and a multi-billion dollar corporate defense team.
Lupe Peña: Our Insider Advantage Against Corporate Defense
When you hire a law firm to take on a giant like ExxonMobil, Monsanto, or Union Pacific, you need to know how they think. At Attorney 911, we have a unique weapon in Lupe Peña. Before he joined our firm to fight for families in the City of Jacksonville, Lupe worked as an insurance defense attorney. He sat at the tables on the other side. He helped write the strategies used to undervalue, delay, and deny claims exactly like yours.
Lupe knows how defense firms use medical records raids to find a “pre-existing condition” to blame for your cancer. He knows how they use “doubt-mongering” science to claim a chemical isn’t dangerous. Most importantly, he knows the settlement “braking points”—the moment where the insurance carrier’s risk outweighs their desire to fight. Having Lupe on your team means we don’t guess at their next move; we prepare for it before they even make it.
Combined with Ralph Manginello’s 27 years of trial experience and federal court admission, this creates the most dangerous team a corporate defendant can face. We are a boutique firm by choice. We don’t take thousands of cases; we take a select number of serious injury and toxic exposure cases so that Ralph and Lupe can give each client the personal attention they deserve. You’ll have Ralph’s personal cell phone number. You’ll get weekly updates. As Stephanie H. noted in her review: “I just never felt so taken care of… she immediately reassured me and took me seriously.”
Watch Lupe Peña discuss the tactics used during depositions: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_qCwqfeRRs
Frequently Asked Questions for City of Jacksonville Toxic Exposure Victims
Can I file a mesothelioma claim in City of Jacksonville if my exposure was 30 years ago?
Yes. Because of the “discovery rule,” the legal clock typically starts when you receive a diagnosis, not when the exposure occurred. Mesothelioma has a latency period of up to 50 years, and the law recognizes that you couldn’t have sued before you were sick. Contact us at 1-888-ATTY-911 to verify your specific deadline.
Can I sue if my old employer in Cherokee County is now bankrupt?
Yes. Many of the companies that caused mass asbestos exposure were forced into bankruptcy and required to set up “asbestos trust funds.” These trusts exist specifically to pay future victims. Even if the building you worked in is gone and the company name has changed, the money is still there. We identify every trust fund you qualify for and file the claims for you.
What if I was a smoker but now have lung cancer and worked with asbestos?
You still have a case. In fact, medical science shows a “synergistic effect.” If you smoked AND worked with asbestos, your risk of lung cancer multiplies from 5x to over 50x. The law does not let the asbestos company off the hook because you smoked; if their product contributed to your cancer, they are liable for the damage.
Will filing a toxic exposure claim affect my Social Security or VA benefits?
Usually, no. Personal injury settlements and trust fund payments are generally considered private compensation and do not interfere with your earned VA disability or Social Security benefits. For veterans, these legal claims often provide a massive financial supplement to their existing benefits.
Do I have to pay anything upfront to start a case?
No. We work entirely on a contingency fee basis. We advance all the costs of your case—thousands of dollars for expert medical testimony, industrial hygiene reconstruction, and court filings. If we don’t win a settlement or verdict for you, you owe us absolutely nothing.
Why shouldn’t I just use a big “mesothelioma firm” I saw on TV?
Many of those firms are referral mills. They spend millions on advertising just to “sign and flip” your case to another firm for a fee. You may never even speak to the lead attorney. At Attorney 911, you work directly with Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña. We are the ones who litigate your case, we are the ones who answer your calls, and we are the ones who stand with you in court.
Is my immigration status a barrier to filing a claim in Jacksonville?
No. Every worker in Texas, regardless of their immigration status, has the right to a safe workplace and the right to compensation for injuries caused by negligence. We speak Spanish, and we have a 4-part podcast series dedicated to protecting the rights of immigrant workers. Your case information is confidential and protected.
Listen to our immigration series with attorney Magali Candler here: https://share.transistor.fm/s/7787dfb4
Your Right to a Safe Workplace: Federal Regulations and Employer Negligence
Every job site in the City of Jacksonville is governed by federal safety standards. When an employer or a manufacturer ignores these standards to save time or money, they are being negligent. Witnessing the aftermath of a failure to follow OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) regulations is a core part of what we do.
- 29 CFR 1910.1001 (General Industry Asbestos Standard): Employers are required to monitor air levels, provide respiratory protection, and conduct regular medical surveillance for anyone exposed to asbestos. If your old plant didn’t have a “Respirator Program,” they broke the law.
- 29 CFR 1910.1028 (Benzene Standard): This requires employers to keep benzene exposure below 1 ppm. It also mandates specific protective clothing, as benzene can be absorbed directly through the skin. If you were sent into a tank without a suit or a supplied-air respirator, yours was an illegal exposure.
- 29 CFR 1926.651 (Excavation Standard): This requires protective systems—like trench boxes—for any trench deeper than 5 feet. In Cherokee County, soil can be unstable. Skipping these protections is a death sentence for workers.
When we take your case, we don’t just ask if you got sick. We ask how the safety system failed you. We look for the missing inspections, the ignored safety meetings, and the cost-cutting measures that traded your health for their quarterly profits.
Learn more about OSHA’s worker rights and protections at: https://www.osha.gov
Educational Resources and Local Treatment Centers
A toxic exposure diagnosis is overwhelming. While we fight the legal battle, we want to make sure you are getting the best support possible.
Regional Cancer and Lung Specialists
If you are in the City of Jacksonville, you are only a couple of hours away from some of the best specialty care in the world.
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston): Consistently ranked as the #1 cancer hospital in the nation. They have a dedicated Mesothelioma Center and an world-renowned Leukemia Department. https://www.mdanderson.org / 1-877-632-6789.
- UT Health East Texas / Tyler Pulmonary: For non-cancerous conditions like asbestosis or silicosis, the pulmonary specialists in Tyler offer expert diagnosis and management of scarred lung tissue.
- UT Southwestern Medical Center (Dallas): An NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center with advanced research in occupational lung diseases. https://www.utsouthwestern.edu/ Simmons Cancer Center.
Support and Information
- Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation: This non-profit provides support groups and connects patients with clinical trials for new treatments. https://www.curemeso.org
- Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS): Provides patient financial aid and information specialists for those dealing with AML, MDS, or lymphoma. https://www.lls.org
- ClinicalTrials.gov: You can search for “mesothelioma” or “leukemia” PLUS your ZIP code in Jacksonville to see what new treatments are currently being tested near you. https://clinicaltrials.gov
Veterans Services
- VA HUD-VASH and PACT Act Screening: The nearest VA Medical Center to Jacksonville is in Shreveport, LA or the Tyler VA Clinic. Ensure you request a “Toxic Exposure Screening” established by the PACT Act.
Evidence Preservation: What You Need to Do Right Now
The corporation that exposed you is counting on your silence. Every day you wait to hire an attorney is a day they use to potentially dispose of the evidence that proves your claim. Here is what Attorney 911 does the moment you hire us:
- Work History Reconstruction: We sit down with you and go through every job site you ever worked at in East Texas. We don’t just need the company name; we need the floor plan, the name of your foreman, and the products you used.
- Product Identification: We maintain a massive database of asbestos-containing products and chemical formulations. If you remember using “Unibestos” or “Kaylo,” we already have the documents proving those products were dangerous.
- Witness Location: We use private investigators to track down your former co-workers. Their testimony is the “glue” that binds your exposure to the defendant’s product.
- Preservation Demands: We send formal legal notices called “Spoliation Letters” to every potentially liable party. This puts them on notice that if they “lose” your safety records or air monitoring data, they will face severe penalties in court.
As Christopher W. noted in his verified Google review: “Ralph & the Manginello law firm attorneys did more (in less than 8 weeks!) on my car accident case than a previous attorney who had the case for OVER a year.” We bring that same East Texas urgency to every toxic tort client we represent.
Conclusion: The Fight for the City of Jacksonville Starts Today
The City of Jacksonville was built by hard-working people who expected a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work. You did your part of the deal. The corporations that exposed you to asbestos, benzene, and silica did not. They took your labor, they took your health, and they hoped you’d never figure out why you got sick.
They were wrong.
At Attorney 911, we are more than just your lawyers. We are your advocates in a system designed to protect the powerful. We bring the scientific authority to prove your illness, the corporate intelligence to expose their secrets, and the trial-hardened experience to win. Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña are ready to take your fight from Jacksonville to the federal courthouses and trust fund administrators that owe you justice.
Your family’s future shouldn’t be a casualty of corporate greed. Whether you are dealing with a mesothelioma diagnosis, a benzene-related leukemia, or a devastating workplace injury, do not face it alone. Join the 270+ clients who have rated us 4.9 out of 5 stars because we treat every case like a 911 emergency.
One number. 24/7 responsiveness. No fee unless we win.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today.
Attorney 911 / The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC
Principal Office: Houston, Texas.
Serving City of Jacksonville, Cherokee County, and all of Texas.
Hablamos Español. Llame a Lupe Peña al 1-888-ATTY-911 para una consulta gratis. Su estatus migratorio NO afecta sus derechos legales.