Kentucky Mesothelioma, Asbestos & Toxic Exposure Attorneys: Attorney 911 Brings 27+ Years of Multi-Million Dollar Verdicts to Kentucky Families Battling Mesothelioma ($5M-$250M+), Benzene/AML ($500K-$50M+), Roundup/NHL ($10.9B Bayer Settlement), and PFAS Thyroid/Kidney Cancer; Led by Ralph Manginello (Federal Court Admitted, $2.1B BP Texas City Pedigree) and Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Pena Who Knows Exactly How Travelers, CNA and Hartford Historically Coded Asbestos Claims to Deny Justice, We Fight Johns-Manville (Sumner Simpson Papers Proved Knowledge Since 1930s), 3M ($12.5B PFAS settlement), and Monsanto (Ghostwrote EPA studies) for Decades of Science Concealment; Covering Ashland Catlettsburg Refinery Benzene, Louisville CSX/Railroad FELA Claims, Calvert City Chemical Industrial Exposure, and Fort Campbell AFFF Contamination with IARC Group 1 Evidence and OSHA Industrial Hygiene Monitoring (29 CFR 1910.1001); Asbestos Trust Funds ($30B+ in 60 Trusts) Erode 8% Annually While Mesothelioma Median Survival is 12-21 Months — We Secure Maximum Compensation via 11 Simultaneous Pathways including Asbestos Trusts, CLJA, and RECA; Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, 1-888-ATTY-911, Hablamos Espanol.
You Were a Kentucky Worker, Not a Corporate Experiment: Holding Big Industry Accountable for Toxic Exposure The year was 1974, and the industrial landscape of Louisville, Kentucky, was about to change the world of occupational medicine forever. At the B.F. Goodrich chemical plant in "Rubbertown," three workers were diagnosed with angiosarcoma of the liver, a cancer so rare it was virtually unheard of in the general population. Within months, the medical community realized these men shared more than just a diagnosis—they shared a workspace where vinyl chloride matured into a terminal death sentence. What they discovered at that Louisville facility revealed a dark truth that continues to haunt Kentucky workers today: the companies we trust with our livelihoods often keep secrets that cost us our lives. For decades, the men and women who built Kentucky’s economy—from the coal seams of Harlan and Pike Counties to the high-heat manufacturing lines in Lexington and the sprawling chemical corridors of Calvert City—breathed in dust and vapor that their employers knew was lethal. You went to work at the Ford Louisville Assembly Plant, the Century Aluminum smelters, or the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant to provide for your family. You didn't realize that every shift…