City of Memphis Mesothelioma & Toxic Exposure Lawyer: Holding Corporations Accountable for Hall County Workers and Families
For generations, the men and women of the City of Memphis and across Hall County have built the backbone of the Texas Panhandle. You’ve worked the cotton gins that process the white gold of our plains, maintained the rails of the old Fort Worth and Denver Railway, operated the heavy rigs in the Panhandle oilfields, and kept our construction sites moving along U.S. 287. You did this work with pride, often in the heat of a Texas summer or the biting wind of a Panhandle winter, thinking you were providing a safe future for your children and grandchildren.
What many big corporations didn’t tell you—and what we are here to expose—is that the very air you breathed at those job sites was often saturated with invisible killers. Whether it was the microscopic asbestos fibers used to insulate ricketily built industrial machines, the benzene vapors drifting through oilfield transport lines, or the toxic pesticides sprayed across our agricultural acreage, the companies that manufactured these substances knew the risks. They had the studies, they had the internal memos, and they had the warnings from their own scientists as early as the 1930s. They chose their quarterly profits over the lungs and lives of City of Memphis workers.
At Attorney 911, we believe that a diagnosis of mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia (AML), or accelerated silicosis is not just “bad luck.” It is the biological evidence of a corporate crime. Our firm, led by Ralph Manginello and backed by the unique insider perspective of former insurance defense attorney Lupe Peña, provides the aggressive, data-driven advocacy needed to take on billion-dollar defendants. We know City of Memphis, we know Hall County, and we know exactly how these corporations try to hide.
If you or a loved one in the City of Memphis is facing a life-altering diagnosis after a career in our region’s industries, you don’t have to face it alone. We pursue every available pathway for compensation—from more than 60 active asbestos bankruptcy trust funds holding $30 billion to direct civil litigation against solvent manufacturers. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential evaluation of your case.
The Inner Workings of a Legal Emergency: Why We Are Attorney 911
When we branded our firm “Attorney 911,” it wasn’t for a catchy name. It was because when a family in the City of Memphis receives a mesothelioma diagnosis or survives a catastrophic refinery explosion, it represents a true legal emergency. Evidence begins to disappear the moment you leave the job site. Corporations begin shredding records, witnesses retire and move away from Hall County, and the legal clocks known as statutes of limitations start their relentless countdown.
Ralph Manginello has spent more than 27 years in the pits of high-stakes litigation. He is admitted to practice before the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas and has stood toe-to-toe with multinational giants. Most notably, Ralph was part of the litigation team that held BP accountable following the Texas City Refinery explosion—a case that resulted in $2.1 billion in total settlements. That experience in handling one of the largest industrial disasters in American history is what we bring to every City of Memphis resident who walks through our doors.
We don’t operate like the “settlement mills” you see on national television. When you call 1-888-ATTY-911, you aren’t talking to a call center in another state. You are talking to a firm that understands Texas law, Texas industries, and the specific geographic landscape of Hall County. We know that a worker at a cotton gin in the City of Memphis has a different exposure profile than a pipefitter in a Houston refinery, but the underlying corporate negligence is often identical.
Our second-in-command, Lupe Peña, provides the “nuclear advantage” for our clients. Lupe didn’t just study law; he spent years on the other side. As a former attorney for a national insurance defense firm, Lupe knows the exact playbook these corporations use to deny City of Memphis toxic exposure claims. He has seen how adjusters look for ways to blame a worker’s smoking history for a cancer clearly caused by asbestos. He knows how they exploit “statutes of repose” to try and kill a case before it even starts. Today, Lupe uses that classified information to build “defense-proof” cases for the people of Hall County.
Attorney Ralph Manginello discusses the criteria for high-value cases in our video “What Is a Million-Dollar Case?”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI. Toxic exposure cases often meet these criteria because of the extreme physical suffering and the documented history of corporate concealment.
Mesothelioma and Asbestos: The Invisible Dust of Hall County
The City of Memphis has a long history tied to the railroad and the large-scale processing of agricultural products. Both of these industries were notoriously saturated with asbestos until the late 1970s. Asbestos wasn’t used for its health benefits; it was used because it was cheap, nearly indestructible, and an excellent insulator.
The Biological Mechanism: How Asbestos Fibers Kill
The tragedy of asbestos exposure is that it is a silent, microscopic invasion. If you worked near the old railyards in Hall County or inside a cotton processing facility, you likely inhaled chrysotile or amosite asbestos fibers without ever feeling a tickle in your throat. These fibers are so small that they bypass the body’s natural filters and migrate deep into the lower lobes of the lungs.
Once there, the fibers penetrate the pleural lining—a thin layer of tissue called the mesothelium. This is where the biological nightmare begins. Your body’s immune system detects the foreign fibers and sends white blood cells called macrophages to destroy them. However, asbestos fibers are chemically inert and physically too long for the macrophages to consume. This leads to a process called “frustrated phagocytosis.”
The macrophages die while trying to digest the fibers, releasing inflammatory cytokines like TNF-alpha and reactive oxygen species (ROS) into the surrounding tissue. In the City of Memphis or anywhere else, this doesn’t cause immediate pain. Instead, it creates a state of permanent, chronic inflammation that lasts for decades. Over 15 to 50 years, this constant cellular stress damages DNA repair mechanisms and deactivates critical tumor suppressor genes, such as BAP1 and p16. Eventually, a single mesothelial cell undergoes malignant transformation, leading to mesothelioma.
Why the Latency Period Matters for City of Memphis Residents
Many residents in the City of Memphis believe that because they retired 20 years ago, they cannot file a claim. This is a myth that big corporations want you to believe. Mesothelioma has a median latency period of 30 to 40 years. This means an exposure that happened at a Hall County work site in 1975 may not manifest as cancer until 2026.
Texas law recognizes the “Discovery Rule.” This means the two-year statute of limitations for filing a lawsuit in the City of Memphis generally does not start on the day you were exposed; it starts on the day you knew, or reasonably should have known, that you had an injury caused by asbestos. If you were just diagnosed at Hall County Hospital or a regional center like Northwest Texas Healthcare System in Amarillo, your legal clock may have just started ticking.
Multiple Pathways to Compensation
One of the most important things we teach our clients in the City of Memphis is that an asbestos case is rarely just a single lawsuit. It is often a multi-front financial recovery mission.
- Asbestos Bankruptcy Trusts: More than 60 companies, including Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and Babcock & Wilcox, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy specifically to handle their asbestos liabilities. These trusts currently hold approximately $30 billion. We can often help City of Memphis families file claims with multiple trusts simultaneously, providing a faster path to compensation without even stepping foot in a courtroom.
- Civil Litigation: If the company that manufactured the asbestos you breathed is still solvent (such as John Crane Inc.), we file direct lawsuits. These cases can lead to much larger awards, including punitive damages.
- VA Benefits: Hall County has a high percentage of veterans. If you were exposed to asbestos while serving in the Navy or at a military installation, you may be entitled to 100% disability ratings from the VA in addition to your legal claims.
Ralph Manginello explains these complex timelines in our podcast episode “Is There a Statute of Limitations on My Case?”: https://share.transistor.fm/s/bddc1426. Don’t assume you’re too late.
Roundup and Paraquat: The Toxic Reality of Panhandle Agriculture
The economy of the City of Memphis is driven by the land. We are surrounded by cotton fields and ranch land that require intense management. For decades, the companies that sold us herbicides like Roundup (glyphosate) and Paraquat promised they were “safer than table salt.” We now know that was a calculated lie.
Roundup and Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
Monsanto (now owned by Bayer) spent millions ghostwriting scientific studies to hide the fact that glyphosate is a probable human carcinogen. Internal documents, now known as the “Monsanto Papers,” show that the company’s own scientists were concerned about the genotoxicity of Roundup as early as the 1990s.
When City of Memphis farmers or landscapers spray Roundup, the glyphosate and the surfactants in the product can lead to DNA strand breaks in lymphocytes. Over time, this triggers Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL). If you have been diagnosed with DLBCL (Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma) or Follicular Lymphoma after years of using Roundup in Hall County, you may be part of a group of plaintiffs who have already secured billions of dollars in verdicts. In fact, a Philadelphia jury recently awarded $2.25 billion in a single Roundup case. While every case is unique, the precedent for Hall County agricultural workers is clear.
Paraquat and Parkinson’s Disease
Paraquat is so toxic that a single sip can be fatal, yet it is still used as a desiccant on Texas cotton. The science linking Paraquat to Parkinson’s Disease is devastatingly precise. Paraquat’s molecular structure is nearly identical to MPP+, a known neurotoxin. When Hall County applicators breathe in even small amounts of Paraquat mist, the chemical travels through the olfactory bulb or the lungs into the brain.
Once in the brain, Paraquat targets the substantia nigra—the region responsible for producing dopamine. It initiates a process called “redox cycling,” which produces a flood of reactive oxygen species that physically destroy dopaminergic neurons. By the time a resident in the City of Memphis notices a tremor or “mask-like” facial expressions, 60% to 80% of these neurons may already be gone.
If you worked as a licensed applicator in Hall County or lived near fields where Paraquat was frequently sprayed and now have a Parkinson’s diagnosis, you need an attorney who understands the Paraquat MDL (Multidistrict Litigation). Lupe Peña’s experience with the insurance side of chemical defense is vital here, as these companies will try to argue that your Parkinson’s is “idiopathic” or genetic. We prove it was the Paraquat.
Benzene Exposure: The Oilfield and Transport Hazard
U.S. 287 through the City of Memphis is a major artery for the transport of crude oil and refined petroleum products. Additionally, many Hall County residents have spent their careers working in the Panhandle Field or commuting to refineries in the region. These jobs often mean daily, chronic exposure to benzene.
The Blood Poison: How Benzene Causes AML
Benzene (C6H6) is a natural part of crude oil, but it is also a potent bone marrow toxin. When you inhale benzene vapor—whether at a pumping station in Hall County or while cleaning a tank—your liver metabolizes it into benzene oxide and eventually muconaldehyde.
These metabolites travel to your bone marrow, where they attack hematopoietic stem cells. Specifically, benzene causes chromosomal translocations, such as t(8;21) or inversion 16. These are the hallmark “genetic fingerprints” of benzene exposure. This damage leads directly to Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) and Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS).
OSHA’s permissible exposure limit (PEL) for benzene is 1 ppm (part per million). However, NIOSH and many independent toxicologists argue that there is NO safe level of benzene exposure. If you were a truck driver hauling fuel through the City of Memphis or a roughneck on a Panhandle rig, you were likely exposed to levels much higher than 1 ppm during “upset” events or routine maintenance.
In 2024, a Pennsylvania jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil for a plaintiff who developed AML after being exposed to benzene in gasoline. We use these types of landmark results to show City of Memphis workers that the justice system can and will hold these energy giants accountable.
Learn more about documenting your work history and exposure in our video “Can You Use Your Cellphone to Document a Legal Case?”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs.
Silica and the “Next Asbestos” in Texas Industry
Construction and oilfield fracking operations in and around the City of Memphis involve the heavy use of crystalline silica. Whether it is the sand used in hydraulic fracturing or the dust generated from cutting stone countertops and concrete, respirable silica is a death sentence for the lungs.
Silicosis is an irreversible, progressive disease. In the Panhandle, we are seeing a rise in “accelerated silicosis” among younger workers in their 30s and 40s. When you breathe in silica dust, the sharp, glass-like particles lodge in your alveoli. Much like asbestos, this triggers a massive inflammatory response that turns healthy lung tissue into stiff, non-functional scar tissue.
If your employer in the City of Memphis didn’t provide NIOSH-approved respirators or failed to implement wet-cutting methods to suppress dust, they violated OSHA standard 29 CFR 1926.1153. We hold these employers—and the manufacturers of the silica products—responsible for the cost of your medical care, including potential lung transplants.
Heavy Industry: Railroad (FELA) and Oilfield Injuries
Beyond toxic substances, the City of Memphis is a town of dangerous physical work. We represent workers who have been catastrophically injured on the job, and we specialize in the unique laws that govern these specific industries.
FELA: Rights for Hall County Railroad Workers
If you worked for the BNSF, Union Pacific, or any regional line through Hall County and were injured, you are NOT covered by standard Texas workers’ compensation. Instead, you are protected by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA), passed in 1908.
FELA is a “pro-worker” statute. Unlike workers’ comp, which is a “no-fault” system with very low payment caps, FELA allows you to sue your railroad employer for negligence. To win a FELA case in the City of Memphis, we only have to prove that the railroad’s negligence played a part—even the slightest part—in your injury. This is known as a “featherweight” burden of proof.
If you were exposed to asbestos in an old locomotive shop or suffered a spinal injury because of a defective switch or poorly maintained track bed near the City of Memphis, FELA is your path to full compensation for pain, suffering, and lost future wages.
Texas Non-Subscriber Law and Third-Party Claims
Many oilfield and construction companies in the City of Memphis choose “not” to carry workers’ compensation insurance. These are called “non-subscribers.” While this might seem like it leaves the worker unprotected, it actually removes the employer’s legal shield. If a non-subscribing employer in Hall County is even 1% at fault for your injury, you can sue them for the full value of your damages.
Furthermore, we always look for “third-party” liability. If you were injured on a Hall County job site because a piece of equipment failed or a subcontractor from another company was negligent, you can file a personal injury lawsuit against them while also collecting your own employer’s benefits. This “double recovery” approach is how we secure the multi-million dollar results our clients need for long-term care.
Exposing the Corporate Defense Playbook: The Lupe Peña Advantage
When you sue a major corporation or its insurance carrier, you aren’t fighting a person; you are fighting a machine. Having Lupe Peña on our team means we know the machine’s blueprints.
Tactic: The “Alternative Cause” Defense
The first thing a defense lawyer will do in a City of Memphis mesothelioma or leukemia case is subpoena your entire medical history. They are looking for anything else to blame. If you smoked, they will claim it was the cigarettes, even though smoking does NOT cause mesothelioma. If you have a family history of cancer, they will claim it is genetic.
Our Counter: We retain world-class pathologists and oncologists from institutions like MD Anderson in Houston to provide the “genetic fingerprinting” of your cancer. We prove that the asbestos fibers or benzene metabolites in your tissue are the “but-for” cause of your illness.
Tactic: The “Compliance” Defense
Corporations often argue that they “met all OSHA standards” at their City of Memphis sites. They want the jury to believe that if they didn’t get a ticket from the government, they weren’t negligent.
Our Counter: We prove that regulatory standards are the minimum, not the maximum. We cite internal company memos that show the defendant knew the OSHA limits were too high to protect workers but lobbied against lowering them to save money. Compliance with a dangerous standard is still negligence.
Tactic: The “Empty Chair” Defense
In multi-defendant cases, a company might point at a bankrupt company (that now has a trust fund) and say, “It was their product that killed him, not ours.” They are trying to point at an “empty chair” in the courtroom.
Our Counter: Ralph Manginello’s 27 years of trial experience ensures that we identify and name every potential defendant before the case starts. We don’t let them split the blame; we hold them “jointly and severally” liable under Texas law whenever possible.
As one of our clients, Chad H., wrote in his verified Google review: “Atty. Manginello stepped in and absolutely fought for us. A true PITT BULL and fighter. He don’t play!” You can read more about our 4.9-star reputation across 270+ reviews here: https://attorney911.com/reviews/
Action Steps: Preservation of Evidence in City of Memphis
If you suspect you have a toxic exposure claim in Hall County, what you do in the next 30 days is critical.
- Stop Exposure: If you are still working, request a transfer or use the highest level of PPE available. Federal law under OSHA Section 11(c) protects you from retaliation for raising safety concerns.
- Request Your Personnel File: In Texas, you have the right to your employment records. These prove where and when you worked, which is the foundation of an asbestos or benzene claim.
- Secure Your Medical Records: Ensure your doctors at Hall County Hospital or elsewhere are aware of your occupational history. A diagnosis that explicitly mentions “occupational exposure” is much harder for insurance companies to fight.
- Don’t Sign Anything: If an employer or insurance adjuster offers you a “quick settlement” or a “disability package,” do not sign it without an attorney. These are almost always “releases” designed to prevent you from filing a much larger toxic tort claim later.
- Call 1-888-ATTY-911: We send immediate spoliation letters to your former employers, demanding they preserve industrial hygiene reports, OSHA 300 logs, and chemical manifests before they are “routinely” destroyed.
Educational Resources and Treatment Near City of Memphis
We believe in treating the whole person, not just the case. If you are in the City of Memphis and facing a diagnosis, these institutions provide world-class care and occupational expertise:
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston, TX): Ranked #1 in the nation. They have a dedicated mesothelioma program and the world’s largest leukemia department for benzene victims. https://www.mdanderson.org
- Northwest Texas Healthcare System (Amarillo, TX): The nearest major oncology and pulmonary center for Hall County residents. They offer comprehensive cancer care closer to home. https://www.nwths.com
- UT Southwestern Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center (Dallas, TX): An NCI-designated center with advanced clinical trials for lung diseases and hematologic cancers. https://www.utsouthwestern.edu
- Texas Oncology-Amarillo: Part of the largest private oncology network in Texas, providing specialized chemo and radiation therapy for Panhandle families. https://www.texasoncology.com/location/amarillo
- The Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation: A non-profit providing clinical trial matching and support for families. https://www.curemeso.org
- VA Amarillo Health Care System: For our City of Memphis veterans, this facility provides PACT Act toxic exposure screenings. https://www.va.gov/amarillo-health-care/
Frequently Asked Questions for City of Memphis Workers
Can I file a mesothelioma claim in the City of Memphis if my exposure was 40 years ago?
Yes. Because of the “Discovery Rule” in Texas, your time limit to file does not begin until you are diagnosed or learn that your illness was caused by asbestos. Many Hall County railroad and industrial workers were exposed in the 1960s and 70s but are just now becoming eligible for compensation.
My employer in Hall County is out of business. Who can I sue?
In toxic torts, you rarely sue only your employer. You sue the manufacturers of the asbestos insulation, the suppliers of the benzene-laden solvents, or the producers of the toxic pesticides. Additionally, many defunct employers have bankruptcy trusts specifically set aside to pay claims for decades after they close.
How much does it cost to hire Attorney 911?
Zero dollars upfront. We work on a contingency fee basis. We advance all the costs of the litigation—which can exceed $100,000 for expert witnesses and industrial hygiene reconstruction—and we only recover those costs and a fee if we win your case. If we don’t get you money, you owe us nothing.
Does my immigration status affect my right to sue for toxic exposure?
Absolutely not. Every worker in the City of Memphis, regardless of their status, is protected by federal and state safety laws. Your immigration status is generally inadmissible in a personal injury trial in Texas. Lupe Peña is fluent in Spanish and can discuss your case in your native language. Hablamos Español. Llame a Lupe Peña al 1-888-ATTY-911 para una consulta gratis.
I was a smoker. Can I still file an asbestos claim?
Yes. Smoking does not cause mesothelioma. For lung cancer cases, asbestos and smoking have a “synergistic” effect—meaning they work together to make the cancer much more likely. Under the law, the asbestos manufacturer is still responsible for their portion of the harm.
What is the average settlement for a mesothelioma case in Texas?
While cases vary, average mesothelioma settlements typically range between $1 million and $1.4 million. Direct trial verdicts can be significantly higher, sometimes exceeding $10 million, depending on the evidence of corporate concealment.
What evidence do I need to prove I was exposed to benzene at a Hall County site?
We use “Work History Reconstruction.” This involves gathering tax records, union logs, deposition testimony from former co-workers, and “product identification” through site manifests. Even if you don’t remember the brand of chemical you used, we often have databases of what was stored at specific Hall County facilities during specific years.
Can I file a claim for “take-home” asbestos exposure?
Yes. If your spouse worked at a facility near the City of Memphis and brought home asbestos fibers on his work clothes, and you laundered those clothes and later developed mesothelioma, you have a “secondary exposure” claim. The company had a duty to provide showers and on-site laundry to prevent this from happening.
What is the difference between workers’ comp and a third-party lawsuit?
Workers’ comp is like a small insurance policy—it pays for medical bills and a portion of your wages, but it pays ZERO for your pain, suffering, or the loss of your quality of life. A third-party lawsuit against a negligent manufacturer or contractor has no such caps and can result in settlements 10 to 20 times larger than workers’ comp.
Why should I choose a “911” firm instead of a national mesothelioma firm?
National firms often treat cases like a numbers game, rarely visiting their clients in person. Ralph Manginello and his team are Texans. We know the courts in Hall County and Amarillo. We provide the personal cell phone numbers of our attorneys. As Jamin M. shared in his review: “Mr. Manginello guided me through the whole process… He was tenacious, accessible, and determined.”
Is Paraquat still used in Hall County?
Yes, it is still used as a desiccant, particularly in cotton production. However, because of its link to Parkinson’s, the EPA has moved to further restrict its use. If you handled this chemical in regional agricultural operations, you should be screened by a neurologist.
What is “Manganism” and how does it affect City of Memphis welders?
Manganism is often called “Welder’s Parkinsonism.” It is caused by inhaling manganese fumes during welding. It mimics Parkinson’s but often responds poorly to standard medications like Levodopa. If you were a career welder in Hall County and have a Parkinson’s-like diagnosis, your welding rod exposure is the likely cause.
How long does a toxic exposure lawsuit take in Texas?
Because many toxic exposure victims have terminal diagnoses, we often file for “Trial Preference.” This can fast-track a case to be heard in as little as 6 to 12 months. Standard cases may take 18 to 24 months. Trust fund claims can often pay out in as little as 90 to 180 days.
Can my Hall County employer fire me for filing a lawsuit?
Retaliation for filing a legal claim or reporting a safety hazard is a violation of both federal and state law. If an employer retaliates against you, they open themselves up to an additional, very expensive “wrongful termination” lawsuit.
What was the result of the BP Texas City litigation Ralph worked on?
The litigation following the 2005 explosion resulted in over $2.1 billion in settlements. This case proved that systemic safety failures—cutting maintenance budgets to increase profits—would not be tolerated by Texas juries. We bring that same “no-compromise” attitude to every defendant we face.
Will I have to travel for my case?
In most cases, no. We travel to the City of Memphis to meet with you in your home or at the hospital. Depositions are often conducted via Zoom or near your home. We make the legal process as stress-free as possible so you can focus on your health.
What if I have a pre-existing lung condition like asthma?
A pre-existing condition does not disqualify you. In fact, toxic exposures often “aggravate” or “accelerate” underlying conditions. Under Texas law, a defendant is responsible for the additional harm they caused to your specific body, even if it was already “fragile.”
Can family members sue after a loved one has already passed away?
Yes. We file “Wrongful Death” and “Survival Actions.” These claims allow the family to recover for their own loss of companionship and financial support, as well as for the pain and suffering the deceased person experienced before their death.
How do I know if my water in the City of Memphis has PFAS?
PFAS “forever chemicals” often come from firefighting foam used at airports or military bases, or from certain manufacturing plants. We can order specialized independent water testing for your property if a contamination plume is suspected in Hall County.
What is the “Sumner Simpson” letter?
It is a “smoking gun” document from 1935 where the president of an asbestos company wrote that “the less said about asbestos, the better off we are.” It is used in nearly every City of Memphis asbestos trial to prove that corporations knew they were killing people and intentionally stayed silent.
Can I change lawyers if my current firm isn’t returning my calls?
Yes. You have a right to the attorney of your choice. If you hired a large national firm and feel like just another case number, we can review your file and handle the transfer process for you. Our 4.9-star rating is built on the communication that those other firms lack.
The Time to Act Is Now
The assets in asbestos trust funds are finite. Every year, more claims are filed, and the “payment percentages” can drop. Corporate defendants like Johnson & Johnson are attempting to use the bankruptcy courts to cap their liabilities. In Hall County and across the Texas Panhandle, the evidence of your work history is slowly fading as old sites are demolished.
When you call Attorney 911, you aren’t just hiring a lawyer; you are activating a rapid-response team. We move with the urgency that a medical diagnosis demands. We are the “beasts” in the courtroom and the compassionate advocates in your living room.
From the cotton fields of the City of Memphis to the federal courthouse, we are your team. You did the hard work that built this country. Now, let us do the hard work of holding the companies that poisoned you accountable.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential consultation. No fee unless we win. Your fight is our fight.
Attorney 911 / The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC
Principal Office: Houston, Texas
Serving the City of Memphis, Hall County, and all of Texas.
1-888-ATTY-911