Castro County Motor Vehicle Accident Lawyers: Legal Emergency Attorneys for Rural Texas
When a catastrophic truck collision occurs on US Highway 60 outside Dimmitt, or when a farm-to-market road collision leaves you stranded miles from Castro County Hospital, the aftermath feels overwhelming. You’re facing mounting medical bills, lost wages from agricultural or oilfield work, and insurance adjusters who seem more concerned with their bottom line than your recovery. At Attorney911 | The Manginello Law Firm, we understand the unique dangers of rural Texas highways and the specific challenges Castro County residents face when dealing with motor vehicle accidents in remote areas.
For 27+ years, Ralph Manginello has fought for injury victims across Texas, including families in Castro County, Deaf Smith County, and the greater Panhandle region. Our firm maintains offices in Houston, Austin, and Beaumont, and we regularly serve clients throughout the Texas Panhandle, traveling to Castro County when necessary to ensure local families receive premier legal representation. We know that when you’re injured on FM 168 or State Highway 86, you can’t afford to wait for an attorney from Amarillo or Lubbock to return your calls. That’s why we answer at 1-888-ATTY-911—24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
What makes us different? Our associate attorney, Lupe Peña, spent years working for a national defense firm, learning firsthand how large insurance companies value claims and deny valid settlements. Now he uses that insider knowledge to protect Castro County families from the very tactics he once deployed. When a negligent driver causes you harm on Castro County’s rural roads, you deserve an advocate who knows the insurance playbook.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 now for a free consultation. We don’t get paid unless we win your case. Hablamos Español.
The Reality of Motor Vehicle Accidents in Castro County
Castro County sits in the heart of the Texas Panhandle, where agriculture meets energy and high-speed rural highways create deadly conditions. While Harris County recorded 115,173 crashes in 2024, our rural reality here in Castro County presents different—but equally dangerous—challenges. On US Highway 60, where trucks travel at 75 mph through open country, and on narrow farm-to-market roads like FM 168 and FM 1056, the combination of fatigue, darkness, and agricultural traffic creates devastating potential.
Texas recorded 4,150 traffic deaths in 2024—that’s one death every 2 hours and 7 minutes. While Castro County’s population is small, our fatal crash rate per vehicle mile traveled is 2.66 times higher than urban areas. When crashes occur on rural roads like State Highway 86, emergency response times stretch longer, and the nearest Level I trauma centers are nearly 100 miles away in Amarillo or Lubbock. These aren’t just statistics—they represent real Castro County families dealing with catastrophic injuries, often waiting 45 minutes or more for emergency services to arrive from nearby Plainview or Amarillo.
The leading causes of crashes in our region mirror statewide patterns but manifest differently on rural roads. Failed to Drive in Single Lane caused 800 fatal crashes statewide—the deadliest single factor in Texas—but on Castro County’s narrow FM roads, a momentary drift across the centerline often results in head-on collisions with no room for correction. Under the Influence—Alcohol caused 566 fatal crashes across Texas, and with limited public transportation in Dimmitt and surrounding communities, impaired driving poses significant risks on isolated roads. Unsafe Speed contributed to 490 fatal crashes statewide, but on Castro County’s agricultural roads and highways, speed limits of 75 mph combined with heavy farm equipment create deadly speed differentials.
When you’re injured in Castro County—whether in a collision on Highway 60, a rollover on a farm road, or an incident involving agricultural machinery—you need attorneys who understand that rural Texas presents unique evidentiary challenges. Surveillance cameras are rare. Witnesses may be miles away. And the trucking companies transporting cotton, cattle, or oilfield equipment through our county have rapid-response teams ready to protect their interests while you’re still being transported to Castro County Hospital or airlifted to Northwest Texas Healthcare in Amarillo.
What to Do in the First 48 Hours After a Castro County Accident
The first 48 hours after a motor vehicle accident in Castro County are critical, both for your health and your legal case. Evidence disappears quickly on rural highways—skid marks wash away in Panhandle rainstorms, witness memories fade, and black box data from commercial trucks may be overwritten within days.
Immediately After the Accident:
- Safety First: If possible, move to the shoulder of Highway 60 or the nearest safe location off the roadway. Castro County’s rural roads often lack wide shoulders.
- Call 911: Report the accident immediately. Dispatch may come from Dimmitt or coordinate with Deaf Smith County or Lamb County depending on your location.
- Medical Attention: Accept transport to Castro County Hospital (806 County Road 445, Dimmitt) or request air ambulance if injuries appear serious. Given the distance to Level I trauma centers, don’t decline medical evaluation—even “minor” injuries can worsen significantly during the long transport to Amarillo or Lubbock.
- Document Everything: Photograph vehicle damage, road conditions, agricultural debris, and any skid marks before weather erases them. Note landmarks like windmills, grain elevators, or mile markers on FM 168 or Highway 60.
- Witness Information: Get contact information from any witnesses—truck drivers, farm workers, or other motorists. In rural Castro County, witnesses may be the only people who saw what happened.
- Call Attorney911 Before Speaking to Insurance: Contact 1-888-ATTY-911 immediately. Do not give recorded statements to the other driver’s insurance company. Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña are available 24/7 to protect your rights.
Within 48 Hours:
- Seek follow-up medical care even if you feel fine initially; adrenaline masks serious injuries common in high-speed rural collisions
- Preserve all evidence, including damaged clothing and vehicle debris
- Make social media profiles private and do not post about the accident
- Obtain the Texas Peace Officer’s Crash Report (CR-3 form) from the Castro County Sheriff’s Office or Texas Department of Public Safety
- Contact Attorney911 to begin evidence preservation immediately, especially if a commercial truck or agricultural carrier was involved
Understanding Your Accident: How We Help Castro County Victims
Every accident type presents unique legal challenges in Castro County’s rural environment. Here’s how we approach the most common scenarios on our local roads:
Commercial Truck and 18-Wheeler Accidents on Highway 60
US Highway 60 serves as a major corridor connecting Amarillo to Lubbock, carrying significant commercial truck traffic transporting agricultural products from Castro County and energy equipment to the Permian Basin. In 2024, Texas recorded 39,393 commercial vehicle accidents, killing 608 people. In Castro County, these crashes often involve 97/3 Rule dynamics—when a passenger vehicle collides with an 80,000-pound truck, the car occupants suffer 97% of the fatalities.
Trucking accidents on Highway 60 and State Highway 86 frequently involve hours of service violations. Drivers transporting cattle, cotton, or oilfield equipment may exceed the federal 11-hour driving limit or 14-hour duty window. Under 49 CFR Part 395, these violations constitute negligence per se in Texas courts. Lupe Peña knows exactly how to extract Electronic Logging Device (ELD) data, Driver Qualification Files, and maintenance records before the carrier can destroy them.
We recently secured a multi-million dollar settlement for a client who suffered brain injury with vision loss in a commercial vehicle incident. While that case involved logging equipment, the same principles apply to agricultural haulers and energy transport trucks crossing Castro County: we investigate CSA scores, out-of-service history, and whether the carrier properly vetted the driver under 49 CFR Part 391.
If you’ve been injured by a commercial truck on Highway 60, FM 168, or any Castro County road, time is critical. Trucking companies deploy rapid-response teams immediately—we counter by sending spoliation letters within 24 hours to preserve ECM data, dashcam footage, and dispatch records. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 before critical evidence disappears.
Single-Vehicle and Rollover Accidents on Farm-to-Market Roads
Castro County’s extensive network of farm-to-market roads—including FM 1056, FM 807, and FM 168—present unique hazards. These narrow, often unpaved shoulders create dangerous conditions when drivers encounter farm equipment, livestock, or sudden shoulder drop-offs. Failed to Drive in Single Lane caused 800 fatal crashes in Texas in 2024, and on Castro County’s FM roads, this often translates to rollovers or head-on collisions with devastating consequences.
Single-vehicle accidents don’t mean you’re automatically at fault. Texas Tort Claims Act claims may apply if the crash resulted from missing guardrails, improper signage, or road defects on county-maintained FM roads. Additionally, product liability claims may exist if tire blowouts, steering failures, or rollover propensity defects contributed to the crash. We investigate whether the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) or Castro County maintained the road properly, and whether warning signs adequately indicated curve severity or agricultural crossings.
Our firm’s BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation experience—a $2.1 billion case involving catastrophic industrial negligence—translates directly to investigating whether mechanical failures or maintenance negligence caused your single-vehicle crash. We work with accident reconstructionists who understand rural Texas physics and biomechanics.
Drunk Driving Accidents and Dram Shop Liability
In 2024, 1,053 people died in DUI-alcohol crashes in Texas—25.37% of all traffic fatalities. In Castro County, where late-night travel on isolated highways is common, drunk driving poses severe risks. Peak DUI crashes occur between 2:00-2:59 AM on Sundays, when Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code violations are most likely.
Under the Texas Dram Shop Act (Alcoholic Beverage Code § 2.02), establishments that serve obviously intoxicated patrons who then cause accidents may face liability. While Castro County has limited establishments compared to urban areas, drivers returning from Amarillo, Lubbock, or Plainview may be overserved before traveling through our county. We investigate whether bars or restaurants along Highway 60 or in neighboring Parmer County served alcohol to visibly intoxicated drivers prior to crashes.
Ralph Manginello’s Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA) membership means we handle both the criminal prosecution of drunk drivers AND your civil recovery. We’ve secured dismissals of DWI charges when breathalyzer machines weren’t properly calibrated, and we use that criminal defense expertise to maximize your civil recovery.
DUI cases often qualify for punitive damages under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 41.003. If the drunk driver had a BAC over 0.15 or caused serious bodily injury (intoxication assault), the punitive damages cap does NOT apply. In Castro County’s conservative jury pool, documented egregious behavior can drive significant settlements.
Agricultural and Oilfield Vehicle Accidents
Castro County’s economy revolves around agriculture—cotton, sorghum, wheat, and cattle ranching—with increasing energy sector activity from the nearby Permian Basin. This creates unique accident scenarios involving agricultural equipment on public roads and oilfield trucks traveling between drilling sites.
Farm equipment moving between fields often travels on Highway 60 and FM roads at slow speeds, creating rear-end collision risks when passenger vehicles approach at highway speeds. Under Texas Transportation Code, slow-moving vehicles must display SMV (slow-moving vehicle) emblems, but accidents still occur when drivers underestimate speed differentials.
Oilfield traffic from the Permian Basin brings water trucks, frac sand haulers, and heavy equipment transporters through Castro County on US Highway 60 and State Highway 86. These vehicles often operate under OSHA 29 CFR 1926 regulations in addition to FMCSA rules. When oilfield trucks cause accidents, we pursue claims against the trucking company, the oil company (under negligent hiring or ostensible agency theories), and the staffing company if applicable.
The Independent Contractor Defense frequently arises in oilfield cases, with operators claiming truck drivers are contractors, not employees. We defeat this by documenting control over routes, scheduling, and safety protocols—areas where Lupe Peña’s defense background proves invaluable in identifying corporate control documents.
We recently recovered millions for a trucking wrongful death case, and we apply that same dedication to agricultural and oilfield vehicle accidents in Castro County.
Rear-End Collisions and Hidden Spinal Injuries
Failed to Control Speed caused 131,978 crashes statewide in 2024. On Castro County’s highways, where traffic suddenly slows for agricultural equipment or livestock crossings, rear-end collisions frequently cause hidden disc injuries that manifest days or weeks after the initial impact.
Many Castro County residents initially dismiss neck pain after a rear-end collision on Highway 60, only to discover months later that they have herniated discs requiring surgery. Insurance companies exploit this delay, claiming the injury isn’t accident-related. We combat this by ensuring immediate MRI documentation and connecting clients with specialists in Amarillo or Lubbock who understand cervical acceleration-deceleration (CAD) injuries.
Our multi-million dollar amputation case—where a car accident led to partial amputation due to staff infections—demonstrates our commitment to proving causation even when insurance claims complications developed later. We maintain relationships with medical experts who will testify that your Castro County rear-end collision caused latent spinal injuries, not “pre-existing conditions.”
Liable Parties: Who Pays for Your Castro County Accident?
Determining liability in rural Castro County accidents requires investigating multiple potential defendants:
The Driver: Direct negligence for speeding, distraction, impairment, or fatigue.
The Employing Motor Carrier: Under respondeat superior and ** negligent hiring/retention** theories. For agricultural haulers and oilfield transporters using Highway 60, we examine Driver Qualification Files for proper licensing and medical certification under 49 CFR § 391.51.
The Vehicle Manufacturer: Product liability for defects in brakes, tires, or stability control systems—particularly relevant for rollover accidents on Castro County’s FM roads.
The Cargo Shipper: Under 49 CFR §§ 393.100-136 for improperly secured agricultural loads or oilfield equipment that shifts during transport.
The Bar or Restaurant: Under the Texas Dram Shop Act for serving obviously intoxicated drivers who cause crashes on Castro County highways.
The Government Entity (TxDOT or Castro County): Under the Texas Tort Claims Act for defective road design, missing guardrails, or inadequate signage. Note: Claims against government entities require filing notice within 6 months (not the standard 2-year statute of limitations), and damages are capped at $250,000-$500,000.
Your Own Insurance (UM/UIM): Approximately 14% of Texas drivers are uninsured. If you’re injured by an uninsured driver on FM 168 or by a hit-and-run on Highway 60, your own uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage applies. Most Castro County residents don’t realize that UM/UIM also covers them as pedestrians or cyclists. This is often the primary recovery source in rural hit-and-run accidents where the perpetrator flees into the vast Panhandle landscape.
Insurance Counter-Intelligence: What Adjusters Don’t Want You to Know
When Lupe Peña worked for a national defense firm, he learned exactly how insurance companies minimize payouts to Castro County accident victims. Here are the tactics they deploy—and how we stop them:
Tactic 1: Quick Settlement Offers. Insurance adjusters know that rural families often face immediate financial pressure after an accident. They offer $5,000-$15,000 within days, hoping you’ll sign a release before discovering you need $100,000+ in spinal surgery. We never settle before Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI).
Tactic 2: Medical Authorization Traps. Adjusters request broad medical authorizations to search for pre-existing conditions from years ago—the “degenerative disc” they claim caused your pain, not the truck that rear-ended you on Highway 60. We limit authorizations to accident-related records only.
Tactic 3: Surveillance and Social Media Monitoring. Insurance investigators monitor Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok for photos of you performing daily activities, using them to claim you’re “not really injured.” As 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.”
Tactic 4: Comparative Fault Arguments. Adjusters try to assign you 51% or more fault to bar recovery entirely under Texas’s modified comparative negligence rule. Even 25% fault on a $250,000 case costs you $62,500. Lupe knows these arguments because he made them—for years. Now he defeats them.
Tactic 5: Policy Limits Bluffs. They claim “$30,000 is all available,” hiding umbrella policies, corporate coverage, and MCS-90 endorsements that guarantee payment even if the policy technically excludes coverage.
Colossus Software Manipulation. Major insurers use algorithms to value claims based on injury codes, but they deliberately use the lowest possible codes for rural victims. We ensure your treating physicians use accurate ICD-10 codes that reflect the true severity of your injuries, and we document future medical needs to defeat Colossus’s undervaluation of rural cases.
Understanding Texas Law: Your Rights After a Castro County Accident
Statute of Limitations: You have 2 years from the date of accident to file a personal injury lawsuit in Texas (Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.003). Miss this deadline, and your case is barred forever—regardless of merit.
Comparative Negligence: Texas follows a 51% bar rule (Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 33.001). You can recover damages if you are 50% or less at fault, but your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. On Castro County’s rural roads, insurance companies often claim drivers contributed to accidents by failing to control speed around curves or agricultural equipment.
Punitive Damages: Available for gross negligence—conscious indifference to safety. In Castro County, extreme speeding on FM roads, DUI, or trucking companies knowingly allowing HOS violations may trigger punitive awards. Importantly, punitive damages are NOT dischargeable in bankruptcy if arising from DWI-related injury (11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6)).
The Stowers Doctrine: Named for G.A. Stowers Furniture Co. v. American Indem. Co., this doctrine makes insurers liable for the entire judgment if they unreasonably refuse a settlement demand within policy limits. This is our nuclear option in clear-liability cases—especially rear-end collisions on Highway 60 or DUI crashes on Castro County roads.
Damages and Compensation: What Your Castro County Case Is Worth
Economic Damages (No Cap in Texas):
- Medical expenses (past and future): ER visits to Castro County Hospital, air ambulance to Amarillo, surgeries at Northwest Texas Healthcare System, rehabilitation
- Lost wages and earning capacity: Critical for agricultural workers and oilfield employees who cannot return to physical labor
- Property damage: Vehicle replacement given Castro County’s distance from major repair centers
- Out-of-pocket expenses: Transportation to medical appointments (often 80+ miles one way to Amarillo or Lubbock)
Non-Economic Damages (No Cap):
- Pain and suffering
- Mental anguish (PTSD is common after rural accidents given isolation and trauma)
- Physical impairment
- Loss of consortium
- Loss of enjoyment of life (inability to participate in Castro County’s agricultural community events)
Settlement Benchmarks:
- Soft tissue injuries: $15,000-$60,000
- Herniated disc (surgical): $346,000-$1,205,000
- Traumatic brain injury: $1,548,000-$9,838,000
- Wrongful death: $1,910,000-$9,520,000+
Our $3.8 million car accident amputation settlement and $2 million maritime back injury settlement demonstrate our ability to secure maximum compensation even in complex liability scenarios.
Why Castro County Chooses Attorney911
Local Knowledge, Statewide Resources: We understand that Castro County isn’t Houston. We know the difference between a collision on Highway 60 versus a crash on FM 168. We know that “going to the doctor” often means driving an hour to Amarillo or Lubbock, and we calculate those transportation costs into your damages.
Former Insurance Defense Attorney on Your Side: Lupe Peña worked inside the system. He knows which doctors insurance companies prefer for IMEs (Independent Medical Examinations), how they manipulate Colossus software, and when adjusters are bluffing about policy limits. That knowledge is now your advantage.
Federal Court Admission: Ralph Manginello is admitted to the U.S. District Court, Southern District of Texas. This matters for Castro County cases involving out-of-state trucking companies or federal motor carrier violations.
Spanish Language Services: With over 60% of Castro County’s population identifying as Hispanic, we ensure language is never a barrier. Lupe Peña is fluent in Spanish, and staff members like Zulema provide translation services. As client Celia Dominguez shared: “Especially Miss Zulema, who is always very kind and always translates.”
We Take Cases Other Firms Reject: When Greg Garcia’s previous attorney dropped his case, we stepped in and secured results. When Beth Bonds couldn’t get justice for over two years, Ralph Manginello had her bogus case dismissed within a week.
Personal Attention, Not a Mill: Stephanie Hernandez described our approach: “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.” You’re not a case number—you’re family.
Comprehensive FAQ for Castro County Accident Victims
Q: What should I do immediately after a car accident on Highway 60 in Castro County?
A: First, ensure safety and call 911. Given Castro County’s rural location, emergency response may take time. Document the scene with photos, noting mile markers or landmarks like grain elevators. Seek medical evaluation even if you feel fine—adrenaline masks injuries, and the nearest trauma centers are in Amarillo or Lubbock. Then call 1-888-ATTY-911 before speaking to any insurance adjuster.
Q: How much time do I have to file a lawsuit after an accident in Castro County?
A: Texas law provides 2 years from the date of the accident (Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.003). However, if your accident involved a government vehicle (county road maintenance truck, school bus), you must file notice within 6 months under the Texas Tort Claims Act. Contact us immediately to preserve your rights.
Q: Can I recover damages if I was partially at fault for the accident on a Castro County farm-to-market road?
A: Yes, under Texas’s modified comparative negligence rule, you can recover if you are 50% or less at fault. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. Even if you were speeding slightly, if the other driver was primarily negligent (DUI, texting, running a stop sign), you can still recover substantial damages.
Q: What if the other driver was uninsured or fled the scene on FM 168?
A: Castro County’s rural roads see hit-and-run accidents more frequently than urban areas. Approximately 14% of Texas drivers are uninsured. Your own Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist (UM/UIM) coverage applies in these situations—even though you were the victim, not the at-fault party. We help Castro County residents access these policies, which often provide the only path to recovery in hit-and-run cases.
Q: How does Attorney911 handle cases so far from your Houston office?
A: While our principal office is in Houston at 1177 West Loop S, we regularly serve clients throughout the Texas Panhandle, including Castro County. We travel to Dimmitt when necessary, conduct video conferences for convenience, and work with local medical providers and investigators. Distance is never a barrier to justice.
Q: What is a Stowers demand and how can it help my Castro County case?
A: A Stowers demand is a settlement offer within the at-fault party’s insurance policy limits. If the insurer unreasonably rejects it and a jury awards more than the policy limits, the insurer becomes liable for the entire verdict. This is particularly powerful in clear-liability cases—like rear-end collisions on Highway 60 or DUIs on Castro County roads—where liability is obvious but insurers delay payment.
Q: Can undocumented immigrants file personal injury claims in Castro County?
A: Yes. Immigration status does not affect your right to compensation in Texas. We serve all members of the Castro County community regardless of documentation status. Your consultation and case information remain confidential.
Q: How much will it cost to hire Attorney911 for my Castro County accident?
A: We work on a contingency fee basis. That means you pay nothing upfront—no retainer, no hourly fees. We advance all investigation costs, expert fees, and litigation expenses. Our fee is 33.33% if settled before filing suit, and 40% if we go to trial. If we don’t win, you owe us nothing. You may still be responsible for court costs and case expenses if you lose, but we discuss these risks upfront.
Q: What if I was injured by an agricultural tractor or oilfield truck on a Castro County road?
A: These cases involve complex liability chains. We investigate whether the driver was an employee or contractor, whether the vehicle was properly equipped for highway travel (slow-moving vehicle emblems, lighting), and whether cargo was secured properly under FMCSA regulations. We recently recovered millions for a trucking wrongful death case and apply that same rigor to agricultural and oilfield accidents.
Q: Should I accept the insurance company’s first settlement offer?
A: Absolutely not. Insurance companies often offer 10-20% of your case’s true value within days, hoping you’ll sign before discovering the full extent of your injuries. Once you sign a release, you cannot seek additional compensation—even if you later need surgery. As client Tracey White described: “She had received a offer but she told me to give her one more week because she knew she could get a better offer.” We ensure you receive maximum compensation, not quick settlements.
Q: What evidence disappears first in a Castro County truck accident case?
A: Critical evidence includes: Electronic Logging Device (ELD) data (30-180 day retention), dashcam footage (7-30 days for many systems), black box ECM data, and surveillance from nearby ranch entrances or gas stations. On rural roads like FM 1056 or Highway 86, witness memories fade quickly because traffic is sparse. That’s why we send preservation letters within 24 hours of retention.
Q: Can I sue the oil company if their contractor’s truck caused my accident on Highway 60?
A: Possibly, under theories of negligent hiring, ostensible agency, or ** negligent entrustment**. If the oil company exercised control over the contractor’s routes, schedules, or safety protocols, we may pierce the independent contractor veil. Lupe Peña’s insurance defense experience is particularly valuable in identifying corporate control documents that establish liability.
Q: What if my child was injured in a school bus accident in Castro County?
A: School bus accidents involve special rules. If the bus is operated by Castro County or Dimmitt ISD, sovereign immunity applies with damage caps ($100,000-$500,000) and a 6-month notice requirement. If operated by a private contractor, standard negligence rules apply. We investigate bus driver qualifications, maintenance records, and whether the district followed safety protocols.
Q: How does Attorney911 calculate pain and suffering for rural Castro County residents?
A: Pain and suffering damages account for the unique impact of injuries on rural lifestyles—the inability to work agricultural jobs, drive long distances to medical care, or participate in ranching activities. We use the multiplier method (2-5x economic damages depending on severity) but also document specific ways your Castro County lifestyle has been impacted, from missing cattle work to inability to attend community events.
Your Next Step: Call Attorney911 Today
If you’ve been injured in a motor vehicle accident on Highway 60, FM 168, State Highway 86, or any road in Castro County, you don’t have to face the insurance companies alone. The trucking companies, agricultural haulers, and corporate defendants have teams of lawyers protecting them. You deserve someone protecting you.
Ralph Manginello has spent 27+ years fighting for Texas families, from the BP explosion litigation to securing multi-million dollar settlements for catastrophic injury victims. Lupe Peña brings insider knowledge of insurance defense tactics that levels the playing field. Together with our dedicated staff—including Leonor, who clients consistently praise for taking “the weight of worries off shoulders”—we provide the aggressive, compassionate representation Castro County families need.
We don’t get paid unless we win. We answer 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911. We travel to Castro County when necessary. And we fight for every dime you deserve.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 now for your free consultation. Because when disaster strikes on Castro County’s highways, you need Legal Emergency Lawyers™ who understand rural Texas justice.
Hablamos Español. Llame hoy.