City of Tulia Toxic Exposure and Dangerous Industry Worker Rights: The Comprehensive Guide to Holding Corporations Accountable
For generations, the families of City of Tulia and across Swisher County have built their lives on the high plains of the Texas Panhandle. You’ve worked the grain elevators that line Interstate 27, seen the dust clouds rise during the harvest from Kress to Happy, and maintained the infrastructure that keeps our rural economy moving. But while you were doing the hard work to provide for your children, the corporations that manufactured the chemicals you handled and the insulation you cut were keeping a deadly secret. They knew that the dust you breathed and the substances you touched were capable of causing mesothelioma, leukemia, and terminal lung disease decades later.
At Attorney 911, we believe that a diagnosis like mesothelioma or acute myeloid leukemia isn’t just a medical tragedy—it is a betrayal of the trust you placed in your employers and the products you used. Founded by Ralph Manginello, our firm brings 27 plus years of trial experience to the fight for Swisher County workers. We aren’t a settlement mill that treats you like a file number; we are a litigation team that understands the biological mechanisms of toxic harm and the corporate history of concealment. With Lupe Peña on our team—an attorney who carries the insider knowledge of a former insurance defense lawyer—we know exactly how the other side tries to minimize your suffering in the courtrooms of the Southern and Northern Districts of Texas.
If you or a loved one in City of Tulia is facing a life-altering illness after years of industrial or agricultural work, you have rights that go far beyond a simple insurance claim. You may be entitled to compensation from multi-billion dollar asbestos trust funds, direct lawsuits against solvent chemical manufacturers, and federal programs designed for those who served our country. The clock is already ticking on the evidence needed to prove your case. Call us today at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential evaluation of your rights.
The Recognition Phase: When a Life of Hard Work in City of Tulia Becomes a Medical Crisis
In City of Tulia, people are used to a little dust. Whether it’s the fine particulate around the grain bins or the soil kicked up by the Panhandle wind, it’s often dismissed as just part of the job. But for many retirees and active workers in Swisher County, that dust was never “just part of the job.” It was a vehicle for microscopic toxins that have spent the last thirty years quietly damaging your body at the cellular level.
Toxic exposure is the “silent accident.” Unlike a fall on a construction site or a visible injury at a packing plant in nearby Amarillo or Lubbock, toxic harm doesn’t announce itself with a crash. It begins with a cough that won’t go away, a strange fatigue that rest doesn’t cure, or a sudden shortness of breath while walking across your yard in City of Tulia. By the time a doctor mentions words like “mesothelioma,” “silicosis,” or “benzene toxicity,” the damage has been progressing for decades.
We provide the diagnosis that your transition from a dedicated worker to a victim of corporate negligence was preventable. Every day you showed up to work at an industrial site or handled pesticides in the fields around Swisher County, your employer had a non-delegable duty to provide you with a safe environment and proper respiratory protection. When they failed to do so—knowing the risks involved—they broke the law. Attorney Ralph Manginello has spent nearly three decades holding these entities accountable, from local contractors to multinational corporations like those involved in the BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation, a case that resulted in over $2.1 billion in total settlements and verdicts. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes, but they demonstrate that we have the resources to take on the biggest defendants in the world on behalf of City of Tulia families.
The Anchor: Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure in City of Tulia and Swisher County
Asbestos is a mineral of contradictions. It was once hailed as a “miracle mineral” for its heat resistance and durability, used in everything from the insulation in City of Tulia’s older schools and municipal buildings to the brake linings of the trucks moving cattle through Swisher County. But to the medical community, asbestos has been known as a Group 1 Human Carcinogen for nearly a century.
The Biological Mechanism of Asbestos Harm: Frustrated Phagocytosis
To understand why you are sick, you must understand what happens inside your chest. Asbestos fibers are microscopic, often measuring only five micrometers in length. When you worked near asbestos-lagged pipes or handled old ceiling tiles in City of Tulia warehouses, you inhaled millions of these fibers. Because of their unique needle-like shape, they bypass your upper respiratory defenses and lodge deep in the alveolar sacs of your lungs.
From there, the fibers migrate through the lung tissue until they reach the mesothelium—the thin, protective lining that surrounds your lungs (pleura) or abdomen (peritoneum). Your body’s immune system identifies these fibers as foreign invaders and sends macrophages—specialized white blood cells—to destroy them. This is where the biological tragedy occurs. The asbestos fibers are too long and too hard for the macrophages to engulf. This process is called “frustrated phagocytosis.”
Instead of destroying the fiber, the macrophage ruptures, releasing a cascade of inflammatory cytokines (TNF-alpha, IL-1beta) and reactive oxygen species (ROS). Because the asbestos fiber is biopersistent—meaning it never dissolves—this cycle of inflammation and cellular damage continues for 20, 30, or even 50 years. This chronic inflammation eventually causes genetic mutations, particularly the deactivation of the BAP1 tumor suppressor gene, turning healthy mesothelial cells into aggressive mesothelioma cancer cells.
Exposure Pathways for City of Tulia Workers
If you lived or worked in City of Tulia between 1950 and 1990, your risk of asbestos exposure was significant. We investigate specific pathways in Swisher County, including:
- Grain Elevator Maintenance: Historical elevators in City of Tulia often used asbestos-containing materials (ACMs) for insulation on mechanical equipment and as fireproofing in storage structures.
- Construction and Demolition: Any renovation of pre-1980 buildings in the Swisher County area, including the local school district buildings or historic downtown structures, likely involved disturbing asbestos in joint compound (“mud”), floor tiles, and pipe lagging.
- Railroad Work: For those who worked on the rail lines passing through Swisher County, asbestos was pervasive in locomotive brake shoes, engine room insulation, and steam line gaskets.
- Secondary (Take-Home) Exposure: This is a silent threat to City of Tulia wives and children. If a worker came home to Swisher County with dust on his hair or clothes, and his spouse shook out those clothes before washing them, she inhaled the same deadly fibers. We have successfully represented families in take-home exposure cases where the victim never set foot in the plant herself.
Attorney Ralph Manginello is admitted to practice before the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, and our firm is deeply familiar with the 60 plus active asbestos bankruptcy trust funds that currently hold approximately $30 billion in assets. These trusts, such as the Johns-Manville Trust and the Owens Corning Trust, were established to pay victims even when the original company has gone bankrupt. We ensure you file with every trust you qualify for to maximize your recovery.
As Ralph explains on the Attorney 911 YouTube channel in his guide to “What Is a Million-Dollar Case?”, the value of a mesothelioma claim is driven by the clear link between a negligent product and a terminal diagnosis. Watch the video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
Axis 1: Toxic Substance Exposure — What You Were Exposed To
Beyond asbestos, the industrial and agricultural landscape of City of Tulia and the surrounding Panhandle has exposed workers to a “cocktail” of hazardous chemicals. At Attorney 911, we specialize in identifying the specific chemical finger-prints that prove corporate liability.
Benzene and Hematologic Malignancies
Benzene is a fundamental component of the oil and gas industry. For City of Tulia workers who traveled to Amarillo for refinery work or handled gasoline and industrial solvents in Swisher County, benzene is a primary suspect for blood-related cancers.
Benzene doesn’t just “make you sick”; it attacks your DNA. Once inhaled or absorbed through the skin, benzene is metabolized by the liver enzyme CYP2E1 into reactive metabolites like benzene oxide and muconaldehyde. These metabolites travel to your bone marrow, where they interfere with the production of stem cells. This lead to Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML), Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS), and Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. If your doctor has found specific chromosomal translocations like t(8;21) or inv(16), these are medical markers that often point directly to benzene exposure.
In 2024, a Pennsylvania jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil in a benzene-related leukemia case (Past results vary; every case is unique). This demonstrates that juries are losing patience with oil companies that knew of benzene’s leukemogenic properties as early as the 1940s and failed to protect their workers.
Roundup (Glyphosate) and Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
City of Tulia is the heart of agricultural Texas. For decades, farmers and applicators in Swisher County have been told that Roundup was “safer than table salt.” The “Monsanto Papers”—internal documents revealed in recent litigation—prove that the manufacturer knew this was a lie.
Glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, has been classified as a “probable human carcinogen” by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). Beyond the direct damage to DNA, research suggests Roundup disrupts the gut microbiome and suppresses the immune system, allowing malignant lymphoma cells to proliferate. If you have been diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma after years of applying herbicides in Swisher County, call 1-888-ATTY-911. We are actively pursuing claims against Bayer/Monsanto to secure settlements that cover the massive costs of immunotherapy and chemotherapy.
PFAS: The “Forever Chemicals” in Swisher County Water
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are synthetic chemicals used in firefighting foams (AFFF) and industrial coatings. They are called forever chemicals because the carbon-fluorine bond is one of the strongest in nature; it never breaks down. In City of Tulia, concerns about groundwater contamination are rising. PFAS bioaccumulates in your blood and organs, leading to kidney cancer, testicular cancer, and ulcerative colitis.
The EPA recently finalized strict new limits for PFAS in drinking water, setting the maximum contaminant level at just 4 parts per trillion. https://www.epa.gov/sdwa/and-polyfluoroalkyl-substances-pfas. If you lived near a municipal airport or a site where firefighting foam was used in Swisher County, your cancer may be a direct result of these indestructible toxins.
Axis 2: Dangerous Industry Workers — Where You Were Working in City of Tulia
You worked hard, often in conditions that tested your physical limits. But when an “accident” happens on a Swisher County job site, it is usually a failure of management or equipment—not “bad luck.”
Grain Elevator and Agricultural Equipment Injuries
City of Tulia sits in one of the most productive agricultural belts in the world. But our grain elevators are also some of our most dangerous workplaces. Under OSHA standard 29 CFR 1910.272, grain facility operators are required to implement strict safety protocols to prevent engulfment and dust explosions. https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.272
When a worker in City of Tulia is engulfed in a grain bin, they face asphyxiation within seconds. One cubic yard of grain weighs roughly 1,500 pounds; the pressure on a worker’s chest makes it impossible to breathe even if their head is above the surface. We investigate whether the employer failed to use “lockout/tagout” procedures on equipment or failed to provide life-lines and observers. Furthermore, the dust in these elevators causes “accelerated silicosis” and “occupational asthma” through chronic inflammation.
Construction Accidents, Scaffold Falls, and Trench Collapses
As City of Tulia grows, construction activity increases. However, safety often takes a backseat to speed. OSHA’s “Fatal Four”—falls, struck-by, electrocution, and caught-in/between—account for the majority of construction deaths.
If you suffered a fall from a scaffold in Swisher County, we don’t just look at workers’ comp. We look for third-party liability. Was the scaffold erected by a different subcontractor who ignored 29 CFR 1926 Subpart L? Was the fall protection gear defective? These third-party claims allow for the recovery of pain, suffering, and full lost wages that the workers’ comp system denies you.
For trenching work in City of Tulia, any excavation five feet or deeper MUST have a protective system (shoring, shielding, or sloping). A single cubic yard of Swisher County soil weighs as much as a small car. If your employer sent you into an unprotected trench, they didn’t just make a mistake—they committed a violation of federal law that we will use to prove your case.
The Insider Advantage: Why Lupe Peña and Ralph Manginello are the Choice for City of Tulia
The corporations responsible for your exposure have unlimited budgets and teams of defense lawyers. To beat them, you need a firm that knows their playbook. This is where Attorney 911 offers an advantage no other Swisher County firm can: Lupe Peña.
Lupe spent years on the other side. He was the attorney the insurance companies and corporations called to evaluate claims and find ways to deny them. He knows how they use ” junk science” to claim your mesothelioma was caused by genetics instead of their asbestos. He knows how they hide assets during bankruptcy to avoid paying victims. Today, Lupe uses that insider knowledge to deconstruct their defenses before they even file them.
As Lupe demonstrates in his video on deposition preparation, the defense’s goal is to make you doubt your own memory of the workplace. Watch his insider take here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_qCwqfeRRs. Having an attorney who has actually been in the “war room” of a major defense firm gives your City of Tulia case a level of high-stakes intelligence you simply won’t find at a generalist personal injury firm.
Ralph Manginello complements this with a “PI PITBULL” reputation earned over 27 years. When Ralph takes on a case, the defense knows they are facing a trial lawyer who is admitted to federal court and has the track record to back up his demands. As Stephanie H. shared in her verified Google review of the firm: “They took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders… I just never felt so taken care of.” We bring that same level of obsessive dedication to every toxic exposure client in Swisher County.
Your Rights and the Compensation Pathways: Maximizing Your City of Tulia Claim
One of the biggest mistakes City of Tulia victims make is assuming they have “only one claim.” In reality, a single diagnosis often opens multiple, simultaneous pathways to compensation.
1. The Multi-Trust Strategy
If you were exposed to asbestos at a job site in City of Tulia, you likely encountered products from five or ten different companies. Each of those companies may have its own bankruptcy trust. We file claims with ALL of them. This allows us to stack recoveries, often securing several hundred thousand dollars before a lawsuit even reaches a courtroom.
2. Third-Party Liability
Your employer might have workers’ comp, but the manufacturer of the chemical that made you sick does not. We file “third-party” product liability lawsuits against the makers of benzene, Roundup, or defective industrial equipment. These claims allow for punitive damages, which are designed to punish corporations for their concealment.
3. VA Benefits and the PACT Act
If you are one of City of Tulia’s many proud veterans, you may qualify for specialized benefits. The PACT Act has made it easier for veterans exposed to burn pits or Camp Lejeune water to receive service-connection for 23 plus conditions. We help coordinate your legal claim with your VA benefits to ensure you are receiving every dollar available to you. https://www.va.gov/resources/the-pact-act-and-your-va-benefits/
4. Wrongful Death and Survival Actions
If you have lost a family member in City of Tulia to an occupational disease, the law allows for a “Survival Action” (recovering the damages the victim suffered before death) and a “Wrongful Death” claim (recovering the family’s loss of companionship and support). We understand the immense grief these cases involve, and we handle the legal burden so you can focus on your family.
Why Time is the Enemy in Swisher County Toxic Tort Cases
In a car accident, the evidence is the bent metal and the skid marks. In toxic exposure, the evidence is your medical records, your work history, and the testimony of your coworkers. In City of Tulia, this evidence is deteriorating every day.
- The Trust-Fund Erosion: As more claims are filed against asbestos trusts, their payment percentages often decline. Filing NOW locks you in at the current rate.
- The Statute of Limitations: In Texas, you generally have two years from the date you discovered your injury to file a claim. If you wait, you lose your rights forever.
- Witness Mortality: The people you worked with 30 years ago are the only ones who can testify to the dust levels and the lack of PPE at your City of Tulia job site. We need to record their testimony before it is too late.
We work on a contingency fee basis. This means you pay $0 upfront. We advance all the costs of hiring toxicologists, medical experts, and industrial hygienists. If we don’t win your case, you owe us nothing. There is zero financial risk to your family in City of Tulia to pursue the justice you deserve.
City of Tulia Industrial Exposure FAQ
Do I have a case if I was a smoker?
Yes. This is a common defense tactic. While smoking causes lung cancer, it does NOT cause mesothelioma. Furthermore, the law recognizes that asbestos and smoking have a “synergistic” effect—meaning asbestos is even more dangerous for smokers. The corporation that exposed you is still 100% liable for the damage their product caused.
What if the company I worked for in City of Tulia is out of business?
Many industrial companies that operated in Swisher County went through “reorganization” or bankruptcy. In many cases, an Asbestos Bankruptcy Trust was created specifically to pay future claimants like you. Even if the building is gone and the company name has changed, the compensation is often still available.
Can I sue for “Take-Home” exposure?
Absolutely. If your spouse was diagnosed with mesothelioma after years of washing your work clothes from a refinery or industrial site, she has a valid legal claim. These are some of the most successful cases we handle because they highlight the extreme negligence of employers who didn’t provide showers or uniform changes for their workers.
How long does a toxic exposure case take?
Trust fund claims can often be settled within six to twelve months. Litigation against solvent defendants can take longer, but for clients with a terminal diagnosis in City of Tulia, we can often request an “expedited” or “preferential” trial date to ensure your case is resolved as quickly as possible.
Will I have to travel for my case?
In most cases, no. We handle the heavy lifting. We can meet you at your home in City of Tulia or even at a medical facility like Swisher Memorial Hospital. Most depositions and meetings can now be handled via video conference, making the process much less stressful for you and your family.
Is my settlement taxable?
Generally, compensation for physical injuries and sickness is NOT taxable under federal law. This ensures that the money you receive goes toward your medical care and your family’s future, not to the government.
Educational Resources and Treatment for Swisher County Families
If you have been diagnosed with an occupational disease, your priority must be your health. While we fight the legal battle, we encourage City of Tulia residents to seek care at specialized centers.
The nearest high-level cancer care is available in Amarillo or Lubbock, but for mesothelioma and rare leukemias, the best destination in the world is the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. https://www.mdanderson.org. Ralph Manginello’s primary office is in Houston, just minutes from the Texas Medical Center, allowing us to coordinate with your medical team if you travel for treatment.
For veterans in Swisher County, the Amarillo VA Health Care System provides PACT Act screenings that are essential for your claim. We recommend every veteran in City of Tulia register for the Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry: https://veteran.mobilehealth.va.gov/AHBurnPitRegistry/
The Attorney 911 Promise to City of Tulia
We know that calling a lawyer is the last thing you wanted to do. But when corporations decide that your life is a line-item expense, they have already declared war on your family. You need a team that is “PITT BULL” tough and “FAMILY” focused.
As Chad Harris noted in his 5-star review: “A true PITT BULL and fighter. He don’t play!… Unlike some law firms… Atty. Manginello and I had DIRECT COMMUNICATION on my legal issue.” This is our promise to you—direct access to Ralph and Lupe, honest answers, and a relentless pursuit of the money the corporations owe you.
The corporations that poisoned workers in City of Tulia have armies of lawyers. Now, you have one too. Call Attorney 911 at 1-888-ATTY-911 or (888) 288-9911 today. Your consultation is free, confidential, and could be the most important phone call you ever make for your family’s future.
Contact Our Litigation Team
Principal Office:
1177 W. Loop South, Suite 1600
Houston, TX 77027
Phone: 1-888-ATTY-911
Email: ralph@atty911.com
Hablamos Español. Su estatus migratorio no afecta sus derechos legales. Llame ahora para una consulta gratuita.
Deep Dive: The Science of Occupational Harm in the Texas Panhandle
The industrial profile of City of Tulia is unique, but the toxins follow universal scientific patterns. When we build your case, we rely on the highest levels of expert testimony to survive “Daubert” challenges from defense firms.
Silicosis and the Grain Handling Industry
In Swisher County, grain is king. But the dust created by wheat, corn, and sorghum contains crystalline silica. When you breathe this dust, it causes microscopic scarring of the lung tissue. This is not like a cold or even standard pneumonia. It is permanent.
The silica particles are cytotoxic to the alveolar macrophages. When the macrophage dies, it releases lysosomal enzymes that dissolve healthy lung tissue, which is then replaced by fibrous scar tissue. Over time, your lungs lose their elasticity, a condition known as “restrictive lung disease.” For a worker in City of Tulia who spent thirty years in the elevators, every breath can feel like breathing through a straw. We use NIOSH-certified “B-Readers” (radiologists specialized in occupational lung disease) to prove that the shadows on your X-ray aren’t “aging”—they are silica. https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/chestradiography/breader-info.html
Welding Fume and Manganism
For the welders and pipefitters in City of Tulia who worked on irrigation systems or industrial machinery, welding fumes pose a specialized neurological risk. Many welding rods contain manganese. Chronic inhalation of manganese-rich fumes leads to “manganism,” a condition that mimics Parkinson’s Disease.
If you have been diagnosed with Parkinson’s but your tremors are unusual or you aren’t responding well to standard levodopa treatment, the cause might be the basal ganglia damage caused by manganese. We investigate the manufacturers of the welding electrodes you used—companies like Lincoln Electric and ESAB—who have faced billions in litigation for failing to warn welders of this risk.
Corporate Defendant Intelligence: The Swisher County Target List
We are constantly monitoring the defendants involved in Texas Panhandle litigation. If you worked with products from any of these entities, your case is significantly strengthened by their documented history of negligence:
- Johns-Manville: The archetype of asbestos evil. Their 1933 internal memos prove they knew their products were lethal while they were still being installed in City of Tulia buildings.
- Monsanto/Bayer: Currently facing thousands of lawsuits for Roundup. Their “Let Nothing Go” campaign was a coordinated effort to attack any scientist who spoke the truth about glyphosate.
- 3M: The primary manufacturer of PFAS and defective military earplugs. They recently agreed to a $10.3 billion settlement for water contamination, but their liability for individual cancers is just beginning. https://www.epa.gov/pfas
- Bendix/Honeywell: For those in the City of Tulia trucking and auto repair industry, Bendix was the primary manufacturer of asbestos brake linings.
- ExxonMobil and Shell: If you traveled from Swisher County to the gulf coast for turnaround work or worked at their northern Texas facilities, their benzene and asbestos exposure records are extensive.
As Ralph Manginello discusses in the Attorney 911 podcast episode “What Exactly Is a Personal Injury?”, these cases are about more than a diagnosis—they are about the total destruction of a person’s quality of life. Listen to the episode here: https://share.transistor.fm/s/1f8970c7
The FAQ: Protecting the Workers of City of Tulia
I worked in many different places. How do you know which one made me sick?
We don’t have to pick just one. Texas law uses the “substantial factor” test. If we can prove that exposure at multiple sites in City of Tulia or elsewhere was a substantial factor in causing your disease, all of those entities can be held responsible. We use forensic work history reconstruction to build a timeline of every job you ever held.
My employer never provided a respirator. Is that common?
Tragically, yes. For decades, companies in Swisher County and across the Panhandle ignored OSHA respiratory protection standards (29 CFR 1910.134) because they were “too expensive” or “slowed down production.” This is a clear violation of the General Duty Clause of the OSH Act, which requires employers to provide a workplace free from recognized hazards.
I’m worried about my immigration status. Can I still sue?
Yes. In the United States, your right to a safe workplace and your right to sue for injuries are NOT dependent on your citizenship. This is a point of pride for our firm. Lupe Peña is bilingual and understands the unique concerns of the Hispanic workforce in City of Tulia. We keep your information confidential and protect your rights regardless of your status.
How much does a toxic exposure lawyer cost in City of Tulia?
At Attorney 911, the answer is $0 unless we win. We work on a contingency fee, which is a percentage of the final settlement or verdict. We take the risk so you don’t have to. As Ralph explains in our video “How Do Contingency Fees Work?”, this “democratizes” the legal system, giving a pipefitter in Tulia the same legal power as a billionaire CEO. Watch it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc
What if I didn’t get sick until after I retired from my City of Tulia job?
That is the standard pattern for toxic exposure. Diseases like mesothelioma have a latency period of up to 50 years. This is exactly why the “Discovery Rule” exists in Texas. Your legal clock didn’t start in the 1970s when you were breathing the dust; it started the day you were diagnosed.
Conclusion: A Final Word to City of Tulia Families
The people of City of Tulia are the backbone of Texas. You aren’t looking for a handout; you’re looking for what is fair. When a corporation takes your health and your future to save a few dollars on their bottom line, “fair” means they should pay for every medical bill, every lost wage, and every moment of pain they have forced upon you.
You have spent your life providing for Swisher County. Now, let us provide for you. Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña offer a combination of trial iron and defense-side intelligence that corporate defendants fear. We don’t back down, and we don’t settle for pennies.
As Jamin Marroquin shared in his Google review: “Mr. Manginello guided me through the whole process with great expertise… He was tenacious, accessible, and determined.” That is the representation you deserve.
Don’t let the corporations wait you out. Don’t let the evidence disappear into the Panhandle dust. Call Attorney 911 at 1-888-ATTY-911 now. We answer 24/7, and we are ready to start the fight for your family today.
Attorney 911 / The Manginello Law Firm
Immediate. Aggressive. Professional.
Call: 1-888-ATTY-911
Web: www.attorney911.com
Principal office: Houston, Texas. Serving City of Tulia, Swisher County, and all of Texas.
Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Contact us for a free consultation about your specific situation. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.