For Decades, the Companies Dominating the Delaware Basin Treated Your Health Like a Round of Calculated Depreciation—Now, Attorney 911 Is Holding Them Accountable in the City of Barstow
You woke up every morning in the City of Barstow, drove out to the lease or the rig site, and did the heavy lifting that powers the Texas economy. You breathed the dust kicked up by the frac fleets along Highway 80, handled the chemicals in the process streams without a second thought, and trusted that the safety gear provided was enough to keep you whole. You didn’t know that while you were building a life for your family in Ward County, the substances you encountered every day—crystalline silica, benzene vapor, and legacy asbestos insulation—were quietly initiating a cellular war inside your body. Now, years or even decades later, a diagnosis of mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia, or silicosis has changed everything, and you need a legal team that knows exactly how the industrial machine in West Texas operated.
At Attorney 911, led by Ralph Manginello and backed by the insurance-defense insider knowledge of Lupe Peña, we don’t just “handle” toxic exposure cases; we dismantle corporate defenses. Ralph has spent over 27 years in the trenches of high-stakes litigation, including the landmark BP Texas City Refinery explosion cases that resulted in over $2.1 billion in total recovery. We understand the specific industrial landscape of the City of Barstow and the Permian Basin, where corporate giants often prioritized production speed over the long-term survival of their workforce. If you or a loved one is facing the reality of a life-threatening illness caused by corporate negligence in Ward County, you are not just a case number to us—you are a family in crisis, and we answer that call 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911.
The realization that your illness was preventable is one of the most devastating moments a family can experience. Many workers in the City of Barstow were told that the “West Texas cough” was just part of the job, or that the faint smell of hydrocarbons at the tank battery was “the smell of money.” In reality, these were warning signs of toxic levels of benzene and respirable silica reaching deep into your alveolar sacs. As Ralph Manginello explains in our guide to high-value injury claims, the companies responsible for these exposures have spent millions building legal shields to prevent you from ever seeing justice. We exist to pierce those shields. Attorney Ralph Manginello breaks down the criteria for million-dollar cases—the kind often seen in Delaware Basin toxic torts—on the Attorney 911 YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d690a218
The Delaware Basin Diagnosis: Why Industrial Workers in the City of Barstow Face Unique Toxic Risks
Toxic exposure in the City of Barstow is not a generic problem; it is a localized consequence of the oil and gas boom that has defined Ward County for generations. The Delaware Basin’s unique geology and the industrial processes required to extract its riches created a specific “toxic fingerprint” for those who worked the rigs, pipelines, and compressor stations. For the men and women who lived in the City of Barstow while working for contractors or major operators like ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, or Halliburton, the exposure was cumulative and often multi-dimensional.
The most dangerous aspect of these exposures is the latency period—the gap between the day a worker in the City of Barstow inhaled a toxic fiber and the day they received a life-altering diagnosis. As Ralph explains in our deep-dive on the Attorney 911 podcast, the “Discovery Rule” is the most important legal protection for toxic exposure victims in Texas. It ensures that the statute of limitations doesn’t start until you actually know you are sick and know what caused it, even if the exposure happened 30 years ago at a now-closed facility in Ward County. Listen to Ralph Manginello discuss the critical details of the discovery rule on the Attorney 911 podcast: https://share.transistor.fm/s/bddc1426
The Frustrated Phagocytosis of Asbestos: How Mesothelioma Takes Root in the Permian
While the City of Barstow is known for modern drilling, the legacy of asbestos remains a lethal threat. In the older refineries, power plants, and industrial sites across West Texas, asbestos was the primary choice for thermal insulation on steam lines, boilers, and process vessels. When maintenance crews or pipefitters in the City of Barstow removed old lagging or replaced gaskets, they released microscopic fibers into the air.
At the cellular level, the biological mechanism is a process known as “frustrated phagocytosis.” Asbestos fibers, particularly the needle-like amphibole fibers found in industrial lagging, are too long and rigid for your body’s immune cells to destroy. When a worker in the City of Barstow inhales these fibers, they travel to the pleura—the thin lining of the lungs. Macrophages, the “garbage collectors” of your immune system, attempt to engulf the fibers, but they fail. The macrophages die in the process, releasing inflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen species (ROS) that cause permanent DNA damage to the mesothelial cells. Over a latency period of 20 to 50 years, this chronic inflammation leads to the deactivation of tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and p16, eventually manifesting as mesothelioma.
The National Cancer Institute documents that there is no safe level of asbestos exposure, a fact that companies operating in the City of Barstow and throughout Ward County were aware of as early as the 1930s. https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/substances/asbestos/asbestos-fact-sheet. If you were exposed to these materials at an oilfield site or the San Jacinto Ordnance Depot, you may be eligible for a slice of the more than $30 billion currently held in asbestos bankruptcy trusts.
The Hematologic Assault: Benzene Exposure at City of Barstow Tank Batteries and Refineries
If you worked around crude oil, condensate, or refining processes in the City of Barstow, you were likely in daily contact with benzene. This colorless, sweet-smelling chemical is a natural component of Delaware Basin crude, but it is also a potent Group 1 human carcinogen. For decades, workers in Ward County were told that short-term exposure was harmless. The science proves otherwise.
Benzene is highly lipophilic, meaning it seeks out the fatty tissues of your body—specifically your bone marrow. Once inhaled by a worker in the City of Barstow, benzene is metabolized in the liver by the enzyme CYP2E1 into reactive metabolites like benzene oxide and muconaldehyde. These compounds travel to the bone marrow and attack the hematopoietic stem cells—the “mother cells” that create your blood. This attack results in chromosomal translocations, such as t(8;21) or inv(16), which are the hallmark genetic signatures of benzene-induced Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) and Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS).
OSHA’s current permissible exposure limit (PEL) for benzene is 1 part per million (ppm), but industry internal memos from the 1940s show that major corporations knew that any level of benzene could cause blood disorders. https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.1028. At Attorney 911, we use this documentation to prove that your “compliance” with safety standards was actually a calculated risk taken with your life. As one of our 270+ verified Google reviewers, Chad H., noted, Ralph Manginello is a “PIT BULL and fighter” who doesn’t play games with insurance companies when a family’s survival is on the line.
Silica and the Frac Sand Epidemic in Ward County
The City of Barstow sits at the epicenter of the frac sand industry. The massive “dune” deposits in Ward County provide the proppant used in thousands of wells across the Permian Basin. But for the crews handling this sand, the risk of silicosis is an immediate and growing threat. Respirable crystalline silica (RCS) is so fine that it bypasses your body’s natural filters and lodges in the alveoli.
When silica particles reach the lungs of a City of Barstow worker, they trigger a massive inflammatory response. Unlike organic dust, silica is cytotoxic—it kills the macrophages that try to remove it. This creates a cycle of permanent scarring known as pulmonary fibrosis. In the Permian, we are seeing an increase in “accelerated silicosis,” where workers in their 20s and 30s develop respiratory failure within just five to ten years of exposure because the levels of dust on West Texas rig sites are so extreme.
The CDC has issued several warnings about the specific risks to frac-site workers in areas like Ward County, documenting that even “wet” sand handling processes often exceed OSHA safety limits. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/72/wr/mm7238a1.htm. If your lungs have been scarred because a contractor or operator in the City of Barstow failed to provide adequate dust suppression or respiratory protection, you have a direct claim for damages. Attorney Ralph Manginello discusses how we document these site-specific failures in his guide to using digital evidence in legal cases: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs
Why the Insurance Defense Insider Advantage Is the “Nuclear Option” for City of Barstow Claimants
In the City of Barstow, the companies you are fighting are some of the most powerful entities on Earth. They are represented by massive defense firms that specialize in “scorched earth” tactics designed to delay your case until you can no longer fight. They use your smoking history as a distraction in asbestos cases, or they blame “genetics” for your benzene-related leukemia. They have a playbook, and at Attorney 911, we have someone who helped write it.
Lupe Peña spent years working for a national defense firm representing large insurance companies. He knows exactly how these carriers prioritize claims, how they attempt to “lowball” settlements during the early stages of a diagnosis, and most importantly, where they hide the evidence of their negligence. When a corporation tries to use a “Lone Pine” order to dismiss your City of Barstow case based on a technicality of causation, Lupe knows the exact counter-move. This insider intelligence is why our firm has a 4.9-star rating on Google—clients like Greg G. have praised our transition of their cases, stating that “Lupe Peña took good care of me” after other firms dropped the ball.
Combining Ralph Manginello’s 27-year trial experience with Lupe’s insider perspective creates a tactical advantage that most City of Barstow personal injury firms simply cannot offer. We aren’t a settlement mill that signs thousands of cases and never answers the phone. We are a specialized litigation unit. As Chad H. expressed in his review, “Atty. Manginello and I had DIRECT COMMUNICATION… He follows up with you which is unheard of with most firms.” That direct communication is vital when you are fighting for your life against the industrial machine in Ward County.
The Triple Threat: Holding Multiple Defendants Accountable in Barstow Industrial Accidents
If you were injured in an industrial explosion, a refinery accident, or a rig failure near the City of Barstow, your claim is rarely limited to your direct employer. In Texas, the “Workplace Liability Web” is complex, and many workers’ compensation attorneys only look at the first layer. We dig deeper.
For an industrial worker in the City of Barstow, there are often three distinct paths to recovery:
- Texas Non-Subscriber Claims: If your employer in Ward County opted out of workers’ compensation, they lost their “exclusive remedy” immunity. We can sue them directly for negligence, and under Texas law, they cannot claim you were partially at fault.
- Third-Party Personal Injury Claims: Even if you have workers’ comp, you can sue the property owner (the operator), the equipment manufacturer, or other contractors on the site. These claims are the only way to recover for pain and suffering, physical impairment, and full lost earning capacity.
- Product Liability: If a valve, pressure vessel, or gas monitor failed at a Ward County site, the manufacturer of that device is strictly liable for the damages.
Ralph Manginello was part of the BP Texas City litigation team, a case that exemplified how multiple failures—from management decisions to equipment integrity—culminate in catastrophe. We bring that same level of scrutiny to every City of Barstow rig explosion or pipeline burst. Should You Get a Lawyer After a Refinery Accident? Ralph discusses the complexities of petrochemical litigation here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0YZefHeT8dY
Navigating the Asbestos Trust Fund System in West Texas
While a civil lawsuit is often necessary to hold solvent companies accountable, many of the most prolific poisoners of workers in the City of Barstow filed for bankruptcy decades ago. However, these companies were forced to set up “Trust Funds” to pay future victims of their products. There are currently over 60 active trusts with billions in assets.
If you worked as an insulator, pipefitter, or mechanic in the City of Barstow, you may be eligible to file claims with multiple trusts simultaneously. Trusts like the Johns-Manville Trust, the Owens Corning Trust, and the Halliburton/DII Industries Trust have paid out billions to West Texas families. But the process is technical—you must prove “exposure and causation” through medical records and work history reconstruction.
At Attorney 911, we perform a “forensic work history” for every City of Barstow client. We identify the specific pumps, valves, and insulation blocks you worked around at sites like the Barstow compressor stations or the Pecos-area refineries. We know that trust fund payment percentages are declining—the Manville trust now pays just a fraction of its original claim value—making it essential to file your claim immediately. OSHA’s historical standards for these substances provide the regulatory benchmark for our claims. https://www.osha.gov/asbestos
The Chemical Valley of Ward County: Benzene, H2S, and the Right to Know
For workers in the City of Barstow, the “Right to Know” (Hazard Communication Standard 29 CFR 1910.1200) was frequently ignored. Many employees were never properly trained on the dangers of Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S)—the “silent killer” of the Permian Basin. At 100 ppm, H2S causes “olfactory fatigue,” meaning you can no longer smell the gas even as it reaches lethal concentrations. A single breath can cause immediate cardiovascular collapse.
Chronic exposure to lower levels of chemicals at Ward County tank batteries is equally dangerous. Long-term benzene exposure has a synergistic effect with other industrial toxins. If you were a welder in the City of Barstow, you weren’t just breathing welding fumes; you were breathing them in an environment potentially saturated with volatile organic compounds (VOCs). This “Stacked Exposure” is why we don’t just look for one chemical—we look at the entire environment that caused your illness. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) provides detailed toxicological profiles on how these chemicals interact. https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp3.pdf
Compensation Pathways: What Is Your City of Barstow Toxic Exposure Case Worth?
We are often asked, “What is my case worth?” In toxic exposure law, the answer depends on the interplay of your medical diagnosis, your work history, and the state of the defendants. While every case is unique and past results do not guarantee future outcomes, the data in this field is clear: toxic torts often result in seven- and eight-figure recoveries.
- Mesothelioma Settlements: Average settlements typically range from $1M to $1.4M, with jury verdicts in Texas often exceeding $5M to $10M when corporate concealment is proven.
- Benzene/Leukemia Cases: These are high-value litigations, particularly in the Permian Basin where companies failed to monitor air quality. Recent national verdicts against companies like ExxonMobil have reached into the hundreds of millions.
- Silicosis Recovery: For younger workers in City of Barstow with accelerated silicosis, life/care plans often exceed $2M to $5M to cover the costs of lung transplants and total disability.
Attorney 911 pursues every dime you are owed. This includes economic damages like your mounting medical bills at regional hospitals like Ward Memorial in Monahans or specialized centers like MD Anderson in Houston. It also includes non-economic damages for the physical pain, mental anguish, and loss of companionship your family is enduring. Ralph Manginello explains why “Pain and Suffering” is one of the most hard-fought categories of compensation in his podcast episode on non-economic damages: https://share.transistor.fm/s/398d3090
The Attorney 911 Strategy for City of Barstow Workers and Their Families
The corporations that exposed you in the City of Barstow have a team of investigators and lawyers ready to protect their profits. You need a team that moves faster. Within 48 hours of you calling 1-888-ATTY-911, we begin a comprehensive “Evidence Capture” protocol:
- Employment Record Subpoenas: We secure every hour of your time on lease sites in Ward County.
- Medical Diagnostic Audit: We ensure your pathology is checked by world-class oncologists and “B-Reader” radiologists who can identify the chemical scarring in your lungs.
- Spoliation Letters: We send formal demands to your former employers to preserve safety logs, air sampling data, and chemical inventories before they “routinely” disappear.
- Co-Worker Interviews: Many of the best witnesses to your exposure in the City of Barstow are the people who worked beside you. We find them and secure their affidavits.
As Stephanie H. shared in her 5-star review, “Leonor reached out to me… she took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders… she really made me feel like I mattered.” This personalized attention, combined with our aggressive litigation strategy, is what defines our firm. We don’t just want to win; we want to make sure your family is provided for for the rest of your life.
Protecting the Families: Secondary and Take-Home Exposure in Ward County
Many victims of toxic exposure in the City of Barstow were never industrial workers themselves. For decades, men came home from the Delaware Basin oilfields with their clothes covered in “West Texas dust.” Wives who laundered those clothes and children who hugged their fathers when they walked through the door were unknowingly inhaling asbestos fibers and silica dust.
“Take-home exposure” mesothelioma and silicosis are tragic realities in Ward County. Texas law recognizes that employers have a duty to ensure their workers don’t act as couriers for deadly toxins. If you lived in the City of Barstow and developed an industrial disease without ever setting foot on an oil rig, you have a powerful claim against the company that failed to provide shower and laundry facilities for its employees. Ralph explains the legal definition of personal injury and how it applies to families in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cWdADo3DHRI
City of Barstow Frequently Asked Questions: Toxic Exposure & Industrial Safety
1. I was exposed to asbestos in the City of Barstow 35 years ago. Can I still file a claim?
Yes. Due to the “Discovery Rule” in Texas, the statute of limitations generally does not begin until you are diagnosed with a disease and told it was caused by exposure. For mesothelioma, which has a latency of up to 50 years, your legal window likely opens the day of your diagnosis.
2. My employer in Ward County carries workers’ comp. Can I still sue?
Yes. While you are generally barred from suing your employer for simple negligence if they carry workers’ comp, you can almost always sue “third parties.” This includes the manufacturers of the toxic substances and the owners of the premises where you were exposed.
3. What if I don’t know exactly which product made me sick?
That is our job to find out. We use industrial hygiene databases and work history reconstruction to identify the brands of pumps, valves, and insulation used at specific City of Barstow industrial sites during the years you worked. The “Substantial Factor” test in Texas means we only have to prove a product contributed to your illness.
4. How much will it cost to hire Attorney 911 for my City of Barstow case?
Nothing upfront. We work on a contingency fee basis. We advance all the costs of experts, filing fees, and evidence collection. We only get paid if we win a settlement or verdict for you. As Ralph explains on the podcast, this is our commitment to West Texas families: https://share.transistor.fm/s/c1b705d4
5. I’m a veteran in the City of Barstow who served at Camp Lejeune. Can I file a claim?
Yes. The Camp Lejeune Justice Act of 2022 allows veterans and their families who were at the base between 1953 and 1987 to file for damages caused by water contamination. This is separate from your VA benefits. https://clnr.hqi.usmc.mil
6. Can Roundup cause cancer?
Yes. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, as a “probable human carcinogen.” Many people in the City of Barstow with agricultural backgrounds have developed Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma after years of using these herbicides. https://monographs.iarc.who.int
7. Does my immigration status affect my right to sue for toxic exposure in City of Barstow?
No. In Texas and under federal law, you have a right to a safe workplace regardless of your immigration status. Attorney 911 is bilingual (hablamos español), and we have spent years fighting for the Hispanic workforce that powers West Texas. Lupe Peña’s Kineños roots give him a deep respect for the Hispanic work ethic in the City of Barstow.
8. What is the difference between mesothelioma and asbestosis?
Mesothelioma is a terminal cancer of the lining of the lungs or abdomen. Asbestosis is a chronic, progressive scarring of the lung tissue itself. Both are caused by asbestos, and both are compensable, though mesothelioma claims typically carry much higher settlement values.
9. Why do I need a lawyer for my asbestos trust fund claim?
Bankruptcy trusts have very specific medical and exposure criteria. If you make a mistake on the application, you can be permanently denied. Also, trust payments are often just one part of the case—a lawyer looks for solvent defendants that can pay full value.
10. What diagnostic tests prove benzene exposure?
We look for specific chromosomal translocations in your bone marrow biopsy results. We also analyze your work history against known benzene release events or high-concentration tasks like tank cleaning in the City of Barstow.
11. Is silicosis reversible?
No. The scarring caused by silica is permanent and often progressive. This is why we fight for settlements that include the cost of potential lung transplants and lifelong oxygen therapy for our Ward County clients.
12. How long does a toxic exposure lawsuit take in the City of Barstow?
Trust fund claims often pay within months, while full civil litigation can take one to three years. However, if you have a terminal diagnosis, we can file for an “expedited docket” to move your case faster through the Texas court system. Ralph discusses case timelines in detail here: https://share.transistor.fm/s/ea9a9136
13. What companies are responsible for PFAS in City of Barstow?
PFAS, or “forever chemicals,” are found in specialized firefighting foam used at airports and industrial sites. 3M and DuPont are currently the primary defendants in national PFAS litigation.
14. Can I sue for wrongful death if my spouse has already passed away?
Yes. Surviving family members in the City of Barstow can file wrongful death claims and survival actions to recover the compensation their loved one deserves. The statute of limitations for wrongful death in Texas is generally two years from the date of death.
15. What was the “Sumner Simpson” scandal?
This refers to letters from the 1930s proving that major asbestos manufacturers like Raybestos-Manhattan and Johns-Manville actively conspired to keep the health risks of asbestos a secret from the American public. This documentation is central to our punitive damage claims.
16. I am a City of Barstow welder; is my Parkinson’s linked to my work?
Manganism, or “Welder’s Parkinsonism,” is a neurodegenerative condition caused by manganese fumes in welding rods. It is often misdiagnosed as Parkinson’s Disease. We check MRI results for specific brain scarring to prove industrial causation.
17. Why is MD Anderson important for my mesothelioma case?
As the #1 cancer center in the world, MD Anderson in Houston provides the definitive medical documentation that corporate defense teams cannot dispute. Their evaluations are the gold standard in Ward County toxic torts. https://www.md-anderson.org
18. What are “B-Readers”?
A B-Reader is a radiologist who has passed a NIOSH exam to specialize in identifying dust-related lung diseases like asbestosis and silicosis on chest X-rays. Their testimony is essential for Ward County industrial claims.
19. What is “frustrated phagocytosis”?
It is the biological failure of the immune system to break down asbestos fibers, leading to the chronic inflammation that causes mesothelioma.
20. Can I switch from a different lawyer to Attorney 911?
Yes. If your current firm isn’t giving you the personal attention or industrial expertise you need in the City of Barstow, you have the right to switch. Many of our most satisfied clients came to us after being “ignored” by mass tort mills.
21. Where is your principal office?
Our primary operations are based in Houston, Texas, at 1177 W Loop S #1600. However, we serve the City of Barstow and all of West Texas, often traveling to meet clients in their homes or hospitals.
22. Is a minor injury report at work necessary?
Yes. As Ralph explains in our guide to minor injuries, a small cough or skin rash in the City of Barstow today could be the first sign of a massive toxic reaction. Always document everything: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yHV-kBvK4JE
23. What are my rights if I am partially responsible for my accident?
Under Texas “Modified Comparative Fault,” you can still recover damages as long as you are not more than 50% responsible. However, for many industrial cases in Ward County, companies use this to shift blame. We beat those tactics. Hear Ralph’s take on partial responsibility: https://share.transistor.fm/s/b8317bf9
24. What is the Halliburton Trust?
It is one of the largest asbestos bankruptcy trusts, specifically covering workers exposed to Halliburton products during oil and gas operations.
25. How do I prove take-home exposure for my spouse?
We use testimony about laundry routines and home environments, combined with microscopic analysis of dust remaining in old vehicles or homes in the City of Barstow.
26. Can I sue for chemical burns from a pipeline burst?
Yes. Pipeline spills often involve caustic chemicals and high-pressure steam. These are classic industrial injury claims in Ward County.
27. What is “Olfactory Fatigue” in H2S exposure?
It is the loss of the ability to smell the “rotten egg” odor of H2S gas, which happens quickly and tricks workers in the City of Barstow into thinking they are safe when they are in a lethal environment.
28. Why does Lupe Peña’s background matter to me?
Because he knows the defense scripts. When a City of Barstow employer says, “Our air monitoring showed zero benzene,” Lupe knows exactly where the monitoring was likely falsified or incomplete.
29. What is a “Survival Action”?
A survival action allows the estate of a deceased City of Barstow worker to recover for the pain and suffering the victim experienced before they passed. This is separate from the family’s wrongful death claim.
30. How many Google reviews do you have?
We have 270+ verified Google reviews with an aggregate 4.9-star rating. This is the social proof that our firm delivers on its promises.
31. Does a terminal diagnosis speed up my legal case?
Yes. In many jurisdictions, we can move for “preference” to ensure your case is heard or settled while you can still participate in the outcome.
32. Is there a “safe” amount of frac sand to breathe?
No. NIOSH and OSHA have established that any respirable silica exposure above 25 µg/m3 requires medical surveillance and strict controls. https://www.osha.gov/silica-crystalline
33. What is the first thing I should do after a diagnosis?
Call 1-888-ATTY-911. Before you sign any papers from your employer or an insurance adjuster, get a case evaluation from a team that knows the City of Barstow industrial landscape.
Your Fight for Accountability in City of Barstow Starts with a Free Consultation
You spent your life doing the hard work that Ward County is famous for. You didn’t ask to be poisoned, and you didn’t ask to have your life shortened for the sake of a corporate dividend. But now that the damage has been done, you have a right to justice. You have a right to provide for your family, the right to pay your medical bills, and the right to see the people responsible held accountable in a court of law.
Attorney 911 is built on the philosophy of “Immediate, aggressive, and professional help.” We treat every Ward County toxic exposure case as a legal emergency. Based on our 4.9-star Google rating and Ralph Manginello’s 27-plus years of experience, we are the logical choice to lead this battle for you. You are more than a case to us—you are family. Join the hundreds of clients who have trusted us to take on the world’s largest corporations and win.
If you’re ready to stop the insurance companies from dictating your future, if you’re ready to see the corporate concealment documents used against the people who hurt you, and if you’re ready to get the maximum compensation allowed under Texas law, we are ready to answer your call. Free consultation. No fee unless we win. 24/7 legal emergency response. The corporations in the City of Barstow have a team of lawyers—now you have one too.
Llame a Attorney 911 hoy al 1-888-ATTY-911. Hablamos Español y estamos listos para luchar por su familia en el la Ciudad de Barstow.
Attorney 911 / The Manginello Law Firm
Principal Office: 1177 W Loop S #1600, Houston, TX 77027
Serving the City of Barstow, Ward County, and all of West Texas.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911—Your Legal Emergency Line.