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Aransas County Car Accident & 18-Wheeler Truck Crash Attorneys Attorney911 Ralph Manginello 27 Years Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Peña Insider Tactics Beat Geico State Farm Great West Casualty $50M Recovered $5M Brain Injury $3.8M Amputation $2.5M Truck $2M Maritime 80K Pound FMCSA Violations Amazon FedEx UPS Walmart Box Trucks Dump Trucks Oilfield Halliburton Frac Sand Hauler Hours Service Samsara ELD ECM Data Spoliation Drunk Driving Dram Shop Uber Lyft Rideshare Motorcycle Pedestrian Free Consultation No Fee Unless We Win 1-888-ATTY-911

March 28, 2026 24 min read
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Aransas County Motor Vehicle Accident Lawyers: Gulf Coast Injury Attorneys Fighting for Maximum Recovery

When the vacation traffic converges on Rockport’s beaches or the oilfield convoys roll south toward Corpus Christi, Aransas County’s two-lane highways become danger zones. In 2024, Texas roads claimed 4,150 lives—one every 2 hours and 7 minutes. While Aransas County may be a coastal community of just over 24,000 residents, its position along State Highway 35 and U.S. 181 places it at the crossroads of heavy tourism, commercial fishing, and petrochemical industry traffic. Whether you’ve been hit by a distracted tourist on their way to Fulton Beach, injured by an oilfield truck hauling equipment to the Port of Corpus Christi, or hurt in a collision near the Aransas County Airport, you need a legal team that understands both the local roads and the complex federal regulations governing commercial vehicles.

Attorney911 has spent 27 years fighting for injury victims across Texas, from the Houston Ship Channel to the Gulf Coast. Our managing partner, Ralph Manginello, is admitted to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas—the federal jurisdiction covering Aransas County—and has recovered multi-million dollar settlements in catastrophic injury cases, including a $5 million brain injury settlement and a $3.8 million amputation case. More importantly, our firm includes Lupe Peña, a former insurance defense attorney who spent years learning how large carriers value claims before switching sides to fight for injured people like you.

Aransas County residents face unique risks: the seasonal influx of beachgoers driving unfamiliar roads, the convergence of refinery traffic from nearby San Patricio County, and the two-lane rural highways like FM 1069 and FM 3036 where head-on collisions often prove fatal. When an accident happens—whether it’s a rear-end collision on SH 35 in Rockport, a truck accident on the Corpus Christi Beach Road, or a DUI crash near one of the county’s waterfront restaurants—you need immediate legal protection. Evidence disappears fast. Surveillance footage from the Stripes convenience store or the Rockport H-E-B auto-deletes in 7-14 days. Black box data from commercial trucks overwrites in 30-180 days. And insurance adjusters are already working to minimize your claim while you’re still in the emergency room at Christus Spohn Hospital Rockport.

Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today. We know Aransas County. We know the courts in Rockport. And we know how to make negligent drivers and their insurers pay.

The Reality of Aransas County Traffic: When Coastal Charm Meets Commercial Danger

Aransas County may cover just over 500 square miles of coastal prairie and bay shoreline, but its roads tell a complex story. State Highway 35—the main artery connecting Corpus Christi to Port Aransas and Rockport—sees a dangerous mix of local commuters, seasonal tourists hauling boats to Copano Bay, and heavy commercial traffic serving the energy sector. In 2024, Texas recorded 131,978 crashes caused by drivers failing to control speed alone—a factor particularly lethal on narrow, coastal roads where evasive options are limited.

The county’s economy creates specific traffic patterns that generate accidents. The tourism industry brings thousands of visitors through Rockport and Fulton, many unfamiliar with the area’s unique driving challenges: sudden fog rolling off Aransas Bay, blinding coastal sun, and the narrow, shoulder-less sections of FM roads leading to fishing piers. Simultaneously, the proximity to the Port of Corpus Christi means Aransas County highways carry oilfield service vehicles, water trucks, and equipment haulers traveling between inland drilling sites and coastal processing facilities.

Rural Aransas County roads present the “2.66x fatality risk” documented statewide: while rural crashes account for fewer total incidents than urban areas, they are 2.66 times more likely to be fatal due to higher speeds, longer emergency response times, and the lack of trauma centers (the nearest Level I trauma center is in Corpus Christi, 30+ minutes from Rockport in good traffic). When a serious crash occurs on FM 1069 near the Live Oak Peninsula or on U.S. 181 near Aransas Pass, the Golden Hour can evaporate before emergency medical services arrive.

Weather exacerbates these dangers. Aransas County faces hurricanes, tropical storms, and flash flooding that create hazardous road conditions. The 2017 destruction of Hurricane Harvey impacted infrastructure that is still being navigated by drivers today. Post-storm reconstruction traffic, combined with seasonal population surges, creates congestion on roads never designed for heavy loads.

Why Aransas County Accidents Require Specialized Legal Expertise

Federal Court Admission Matters for Aransas County Cases

Aransas County sits within the Southern District of Texas, Southern Division (Corpus Christi). Ralph Manginello’s federal court admission isn’t just a credential—it’s a weapon. When your case involves an 18-wheeler crossing state lines on I-37, a maritime injury under the Jones Act, or a commercial vehicle operated by a corporation with out-of-state headquarters, federal court jurisdiction applies. Most personal injury attorneys practice only in state court. Attorney911 can—and does—litigate in federal courtrooms, giving us leverage in complex commercial cases that local firms simply cannot match.

This federal capability proved critical in our BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation—a $2.1 billion case that killed 15 workers and injured over 170. That experience handling catastrophic, multi-jurisdictional corporate negligence translates directly to Aransas County’s industrial traffic cases. When an oilfield service company tries to hide behind complex corporate structures or when a national carrier attempts to remove a case to federal court to gain advantage, we’re already admitted and ready to fight.

The Insurance Defense Advantage: We Know Their Playbook

Lupe Peña didn’t start his career helping injured people—he started it defending insurance companies at a national defense firm. For years, he calculated claim reserves, selected IME doctors to minimize injuries, and trained adjusters on delay tactics. “I’ve reviewed hundreds of surveillance videos and social media posts as a defense attorney,” Lupe explains. “Insurance companies take innocent activity out of context. They freeze ONE frame of you moving ‘normally’ and ignore the 10 minutes of you struggling before and after.”

This insider knowledge is your unfair advantage. Lupe knows that insurance companies use Colossus software to algorithmically undervalue claims, that they apply “geographic modifiers” to reduce offers in conservative counties (though Aransas County juries have historically valued personal injury claims fairly), and that they deploy rapid-response teams to Aransas County accident scenes before families even realize they need legal help. When Lupe sends a Stowers demand—or when he recognizes that an insurance company is bluffing about policy limits—he’s doing so based on years of sitting on the other side of the table.

Motor Vehicle Accident Types in Aransas County: From Tourism Traffic to Oilfield Hazards

Car Accidents: The Foundation of Our Practice

Rear-End Collisions on SH 35: The most common accident in Aransas County involves rear-end collisions on State Highway 35, particularly near the busy intersections of Market Street in Rockport or approaching the ferry landing. In 2024, Texas recorded 131,978 crashes caused by “Failed to Control Speed” and 81,101 caused by “Driver Inattention”—the two primary factors in rear-end accidents. When a tourist distracted by GPS slams into your vehicle at the stoplight near Rockport Beach Park, the physics are devastating. These accidents often cause “hidden” spinal injuries: herniated discs at C5-C6 or L4-L5 that don’t appear on initial X-rays but require epidural injections or fusion surgery months later.

Insurance companies love rear-end cases because liability seems obvious—but they’ll argue your injuries are “just soft tissue” or “pre-existing degenerative changes.” This is where our $3.8 million amputation case result proves our capability. In that case, the defendant’s insurance argued the client’s leg injury was minor—until staff infections during treatment necessitated partial amputation. We proved the amputation was a direct result of the accident, not a “medical complication,” and secured millions, not the $50,000 initially offered.

T-Bone Accidents at Rural Intersections: Aransas County’s rural intersections—like FM 1069 and FM 3036 or the crossing at Bayshore Drive—lack traffic signals and rely on stop signs or uncontrolled right-of-way. These are the deadliest scenarios. Texas recorded 1,050 intersection fatalities in 2024, with “Failed to Yield Right-of-Way—Stop Sign” causing 31,693 crashes statewide. When a driver blows through the stop sign at the FM 881 intersection near the Aransas County Airport, the resulting side-impact collision transfers catastrophic energy directly to the occupant compartment.

Head-On Collisions on Two-Lane Roads: Rural Aransas County roads like County Road 6 or sections of FM 136 see devastating head-on crashes, often involving DUI or fatigue. These cases frequently involve the “Silent Killers” of Texas roads: “Failed to Drive in Single Lane” caused 800 fatal crashes in 2024—the #1 killer factor statewide. When a driver crosses the centerline on a narrow coastal road, the combined closing speed often exceeds 100 mph, leaving little chance for survival.

Commercial Truck and 18-Wheeler Accidents

Aransas County may not be a major metro, but it sits at the critical nexus of oilfield logistics. The Port of Corpus Christi—just minutes south—generates massive truck traffic through Aransas County: frack sand haulers bound for the Eagle Ford Shale, crude oil tankers, water disposal trucks, and equipment haulers serving offshore operations. These aren’t just “big cars”—an 80,000-pound loaded tractor-trailer carries 16.5 times the kinetic energy of a passenger vehicle and needs 525 feet to stop from highway speed.

The 97/3 Rule applies with brutal efficiency in Aransas County: in two-vehicle crashes between passenger vehicles and large trucks, 97% of deaths occur in the smaller vehicle. In 2024, Texas commercial vehicles were involved in 39,393 crashes, killing 608 people. The physics of these collisions—crush injuries, underride decapitations, and cargo spills into Aransas Bay—require attorneys who understand FMCSA regulations.

When an 18-wheeler causes a catastrophic injury on SH 35 near Fulton, we immediately preserve:

  • Driver Qualification Files (proving the driver was qualified to operate a CMV under 49 CFR § 391)
  • ELD (Electronic Logging Device) data showing hours of service violations (49 CFR Part 395)
  • Black box/ECM data recording speed, braking, and throttle position
  • Maintenance records (did the trucking company ignore brake violations under 49 CFR § 396?)
  • Qualcomm/dispatch records showing if the driver was pressured to exceed legal driving hours

We also investigate whether the truck was overloaded beyond Texas weight limits (particularly relevant for water trucks and sand haulers serving the oilfield), whether the cargo was properly secured under 49 CFR § 393, and whether the carrier had previous FMCSA violations for unsafe driving.

Drunk Driving and Dram Shop Liability

Aransas County’s tourism economy creates a dangerous cocktail: waterfront bars and restaurants in Rockport and Fulton serving alcohol to beachgoers who then drive unfamiliar, narrow roads. Texas recorded 1,053 DUI-alcohol fatalities in 2024—one every 8.3 hours. The peak danger window is 2:00-2:59 AM on Sundays, when bars close under TABC regulations and intoxicated drivers flood SH 35 and U.S. 181.

But drunk driving cases in Aransas County aren’t just against the driver. Under Texas Dram Shop Act (Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code § 2.02), we can pursue the bar, restaurant, or hotel that served alcohol to an obviously intoxicated patron who then caused your crash. This is critical because Texas minimum auto insurance is only $30,000—grossly inadequate for catastrophic injuries—but commercial dram shop defendants carry $1 million+ liquor liability policies.

Signs of obvious intoxication we investigate include slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, unsteady gait, and attempts to purchase multiple drinks rapidly. We obtain surveillance footage from establishments like the Boiling Pot, Latitude 28°02′, or waterfront hotels—footage that auto-deletes in 7-14 days if not immediately preserved. As Stephanie Hernandez described our firm: “When I felt I had no hope or direction, Leonor reached out to me…She took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders.” We handle the Dram Shop investigation so you can focus on healing.

Pedestrian and Cyclist Accidents

Aransas County’s coastal charm invites walking and biking—whether it’s tourists strolling down Rockport’s Beach Street, anglers walking to the Fulton Fishing Pier, or cyclists enjoying the Copano Bay causeway. But pedestrians are vulnerable: they account for only 1% of crashes but 19% of fatalities statewide. A pedestrian crash is 28.8 times more likely to be fatal than a car-to-car collision.

The deadliest pedestrian zones in Aransas County are the 35-40 mph arterial roads—SH 35 through Rockport, U.S. 181 near Aransas Pass—where speed kills but drivers feel comfortable. 75% of pedestrian deaths occur between 6 PM and 6 AM, and 25% involve hit-and-run drivers who flee into the rural darkness.

Critical Legal Point: Many pedestrian victims don’t realize their own car insurance covers them through Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist (UM/UIM) coverage. Texas law requires insurers to offer UM/UIM, and it applies even if you were on foot. When a hit-and-run driver injures you walking to dinner at Charlotte Plummer’s Seafare, your auto policy may be the only recovery source. This is the most underutilized fact in Texas PI law—and a major focus of our practice. Watch our video on UM/UIM claims at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWcNFyb-Yq8.

Rideshare and Delivery Vehicle Accidents

Tourism drives rideshare traffic in Aransas County. Uber and Lyft vehicles transport visitors from Corpus Christi International Airport to Rockport rentals, to fishing charters at the docks, and to the Port Aransas ferry. These cases involve complex three-tier insurance systems: Period 0 (app off, personal insurance only), Period 1 (app on, waiting—$50k/$100k contingent coverage), and Period 2/3 (active ride or transporting—$1 million commercial policy).

When an Uber driver hits you on Market Street while looking at their app for the next pickup, or when an Amazon DSP van delivering to the Rockport H-E-B backs into your vehicle, the “independent contractor” defense immediately arises. Amazon, FedEx Ground, and gig delivery companies hide behind contractor labels. We pierce these shields by documenting control: Amazon’s Netradyne cameras monitoring drivers, their algorithmic route pressure, their ability to deactivate drivers at will. As client Greg Garcia said: “In the beginning I had another attorney but he dropped my case although Mangiello law firm were able to help me out.” We take the cases other firms reject because we know how to defeat corporate liability shields.

Boat and Maritime Accidents (Coastal Specific)

Given Aransas County’s location on Aransas Bay and Copano Bay, maritime accidents are a reality. Whether it’s a collision between recreational boats in Little Bay, an injury aboard a commercial fishing vessel, or an offshore injury on a platform supply vessel heading out of the Port of Aransas, these cases fall under the Jones Act and general maritime law—federal jurisdictions requiring specialized counsel.

Our case result in maritime law proves our capability: “In a recent case, our client injured his back while lifting cargo on a ship. Our investigation revealed that he should have been assisted in this duty, and we were able to reach a significant cash settlement.” Whether the injury occurred on a shrimp boat out of Fulton Harbor or a crew boat transporting workers to offshore platforms, we understand the unique statutes governing maritime employers’ liability.

The 48-Hour Protocol: Protecting Your Aransas County Case

When an accident occurs—whether it’s a collision at the intersection of FM 1069 and Highway 35 or a truck accident near the Aransas County Airport—you have 48 hours to preserve critical evidence:

Hour 1-6: Seek medical attention immediately, even if you “feel fine.” Adrenaline masks injuries like internal bleeding or traumatic brain injury. Document the scene with photos of skid marks, vehicle positions, and road conditions (critical in Aransas County where coastal fog or debris may be factors).

Hour 6-24: Do not speak to the other driver’s insurance company. They will request a recorded statement designed to minimize your claim. Do not post on social media—photos of you at the beach the next day will be used against you to claim you weren’t injured. Secure surveillance footage from nearby businesses like the Stripes station, H-E-B, or local marinas—footage that auto-deletes in 7-14 days.

Hour 24-48: Contact Attorney911. We immediately send spoliation letters to preserve:

  • ELD/black box data from commercial trucks (30-180 day overwrite risk)
  • Cell phone records showing distraction
  • Driver Qualification Files
  • Bar receipts and surveillance (Dram Shop cases)
  • Maintenance records

As Dame Haskett said in his testimonial: “Consistent communication and not one time did i call and not get a clear answer…Ralph reached out personally.” We answer at 1-888-ATTY-911—24/7, live staff, not an answering service.

Understanding Texas Law: Your Rights in Aransas County

Modified Comparative Negligence (51% Bar): Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 33.001 allows you to recover damages if you are 50% or less at fault. However, insurance companies aggressively push comparative fault arguments, especially in pedestrian cases (claiming the victim “failed to yield”) or single-vehicle accidents (blaming the driver for road conditions). Lupe Peña spent years making these arguments for insurance companies; now he defeats them.

Statute of Limitations: You have 2 years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit. For government claims (if a county vehicle on FM road maintenance caused your crash), you have just 6 months to provide notice under the Texas Tort Claims Act. Miss these deadlines, and your case is barred forever.

Punitive Damages: If the at-fault driver was intoxicated (DUI), grossly negligent, or acting with malice, you may recover punitive damages. Critically, if the underlying act is a felony (like intoxication assault or manslaughter), there is NO CAP on punitive damages under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 41.003. These damages are also not dischargeable in bankruptcy—meaning the defendant pays even if they file Chapter 7.

Stowers Doctrine: When liability is clear—like a rear-end collision on SH 35 or a red-light violation at the Staples Street intersection—we send Stowers demands. If the insurer unreasonably refuses to settle within policy limits, they become liable for the entire verdict, even exceeding the policy. Lupe understands these leverage points because he calculated reserves and settlement authority for years.

Insurance Company Tactics: What They Don’t Want Aransas County Residents to Know

Insurance companies deploy specific tactics against Aransas County residents:

  1. The “Quick Settlement” Trap: They offer $3,000-$5,000 while you’re facing mounting medical bills from Christus Spohn Rockport, hoping you’ll sign a release before discovering you need surgery. As client Tracey White described: “She had received an offer but she told me to give her one more week because she knew she could get a better offer.” We reject lowball offers.

  2. Surveillance and Social Media: Insurance investigators monitor Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok for photos of you at the beach, fishing, or smiling. They ignore context. As Lupe warns: “They freeze ONE frame of you moving ‘normally’ and ignore the 10 minutes of you struggling before and after.”

  3. IME Doctors: They send you to an “Independent” Medical Examiner who is actually a hired gun paid $2,000-$5,000 to claim your injuries are “pre-existing” or “excessive treatment.” Lupe knows these specific doctors—he hired them for years.

  4. Adjuster Geography: They know Aransas County’s conservative reputation and apply “geographic modifiers” to Colossus software to reduce settlement offers. We counter with local jury research and preparation for trial in the Aransas County Courthouse if necessary.

Damages and Compensation: What Is Your Aransas County Case Worth?

We don’t use generic multipliers. We calculate specific damages:

Economic Damages (No Cap):

  • Medical bills (ER, surgery, rehabilitation, future care)
  • Lost wages and lost earning capacity (critical for oilfield workers who cannot return to physical labor)
  • Property damage
  • Out-of-pocket expenses (transportation to Corpus Christi for specialist care)

Non-Economic Damages:

  • Pain and suffering
  • Mental anguish (PTSD from truck accidents is common)
  • Physical impairment
  • Loss of enjoyment of life (cannot fish, boat, or enjoy the coastal lifestyle)

Settlement Ranges:

  • Soft tissue injuries: $15,000-$60,000
  • Herniated disc (surgical): $346,000-$1,205,000
  • TBI (moderate-severe): $1,548,000-$9,838,000
  • Wrongful death: $1,910,000-$9,520,000+

Every case is unique, and past results do not guarantee future outcomes. But our track record—combined with Lupe’s insider knowledge of how insurance companies calculate reserves—positions us to maximize your recovery.

Medical Care in Aransas County: Healing While We Fight

Aransas County’s medical infrastructure requires strategic navigation. Christus Spohn Hospital Rockport provides excellent emergency care, but serious injuries often require transfer to Driscoll Children’s Hospital, Christus Spohn Shoreline, or Corpus Christi Medical Center—trauma centers equipped for catastrophic injuries.

We help clients navigate:

  • Traumatic Brain Injuries: Concussions from rear-end accidents can cause long-term cognitive issues. We ensure you see neurologists, not just ER doctors.
  • Spinal Injuries: We connect you with orthopedic surgeons and pain management specialists who understand that “whiplash” from an 80,000-pound truck is not minor soft tissue damage.
  • Psychological Trauma: Driving anxiety after a collision on the narrow Copano Bay causeway is real and compensable.

Why Aransas County Chooses Attorney911

Real Client Results:

  • Donald Wilcox: “One company said they would not accept my case. Then I got a call from Manginello…I got a call to come pick up this handsome check.”
  • Chad Harris: “You are NOT a pest to them and you are NOT just some client…You are FAMILY to them.”
  • Kiimarii Yup: “I lost everything… my car was at a total loss and because of Attorney Manginello and my case worker Leonor… 1 year later I have gained so much in return plus a brand new truck.”

The Attorney911 Difference:

  • Ralph Manginello: 27+ years, federal court admitted, BP explosion litigation experience, inducted into Cheshire Academy Hall of Fame
  • Lupe Peña: Former insurance defense attorney who knows the corporate playbook
  • Leonor and Staff: “The soul of the firm”—bilingual case managers who get clients into doctors same-day
  • Hablamos Español: Critical for Aransas County’s significant Hispanic community. As Celia Dominguez noted: “Especially Miss Zulema, who is always very kind and always translates.”

Comprehensive FAQ: Aransas County Motor Vehicle Accidents

Q: What should I do immediately after a car accident in Rockport or Aransas County?
Call 911 immediately. Document the scene with photos—particularly important given Aransas County’s coastal weather conditions that can change rapidly. Seek medical attention even if you feel fine, as the adrenaline of an accident can mask serious injuries. Then, before talking to any insurance company, call 1-888-ATTY-911.

Q: Should I give a recorded statement to the other driver’s insurance company?
No. Insurance adjusters are trained to minimize your claim. They will use your words against you. Once you hire Attorney911, all communications go through us.

Q: Can I recover damages if I was partially at fault for the accident in Aransas County?
Yes, under Texas’s 51% comparative negligence rule, as long as you are not more than 50% at fault. However, insurance companies aggressively push fault percentages to reduce payouts. We counter these arguments with accident reconstruction and witness testimony.

Q: How long do I have to file a lawsuit after an accident in Aransas County?
Generally, two years from the date of injury. However, if a government vehicle (such as a county maintenance truck on FM roads) caused the accident, you must file notice within 6 months under the Texas Tort Claims Act.

Q: Does my car insurance cover me if I was hit as a pedestrian walking on Rockport Beach or in Fulton?
Yes. Your Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist (UM/UIM) coverage applies to pedestrians. Given that 14% of Texas drivers are uninsured and that hit-and-runs are common in tourist areas, your UM/UIM coverage may be your primary recovery source.

Q: Can I sue the bar that served the drunk driver who hit me on State Highway 35?
Yes. Under the Texas Dram Shop Act, if an establishment served an obviously intoxicated person who then caused your accident, the bar may be liable. This is critical because commercial liquor policies often have higher limits than individual auto policies.

Q: What is a Stowers demand and how does it work in Texas?
A Stowers demand is a settlement offer within policy limits that, if unreasonably refused by the insurer, makes the insurance company liable for the entire verdict—even above policy limits. This is a powerful tool in clear liability cases.

Q: How much is my Aransas County truck accident case worth?
It depends on injury severity, medical costs, lost wages, and liability clarity. Commercial truck cases often settle for $500,000-$4.5 million, with catastrophic cases or wrongful death reaching higher. We prepare every case as if it’s going to trial to maximize leverage.

Q: Can undocumented immigrants file personal injury claims in Aransas County?
Yes. Immigration status does not affect your right to compensation in Texas. We provide bilingual services and confidential consultations.

Q: What if the trucking company says the driver was an independent contractor?
We investigate employment relationships. If the company controlled routes, schedules, or equipment, they may be liable under respondeat superior or negligent hiring theories. Federal courts are increasingly piercing contractor shields.

Q: Who pays my medical bills while my case is pending?
We can help arrange medical care on a lien basis, meaning doctors treat you now and get paid from your settlement. Your Personal Injury Protection (PIP) or MedPay coverage may also help initially.

Q: Will my case go to trial?
Most cases settle out of court, but we prepare every case for trial. Insurance companies know which lawyers are willing to go to court—and they offer better settlements to clients of trial-ready attorneys like Ralph Manginello.

Q: How do I obtain the accident report from the Aransas County Sheriff’s Office?
You can request the report from the Aransas County Sheriff’s Department or Texas Department of Transportation. We obtain these reports for our clients as part of our investigation.

Q: What if I was hit by an oilfield truck on FM 1069 or near the Port?
These cases involve dual regulation—FMCSA for the highway portion and OSHA if the accident occurred on a worksite. We understand both frameworks and can pursue claims against the trucking company, the oil company (if they controlled operations), and third-party contractors.

Call Attorney911 Today: Your Aransas County Legal Emergency Line

If you or a loved one has been injured in a motor vehicle accident in Aransas County—whether on State Highway 35 in Rockport, U.S. 181 near Aransas Pass, or any rural FM road—time is critical. Evidence is disappearing. Insurance companies are building their defense. And the statute of limitations is ticking.

Ralph Manginello and the team at Attorney911 have recovered over $50 million for accident victims. We are admitted to federal court. We include a former insurance defense attorney who knows the industry’s secrets. And we treat you like family, not a case number.

Call 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911) 24/7 for a free consultation.
Email: ralph@atty911.com or lupe@atty911.com
Hablamos Español.

Don’t let the insurance company decide what your recovery is worth. Let Attorney911 fight for every dime you deserve. Call now.

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