City of Queen City Mesothelioma, Asbestos & Toxic Exposure Attorneys: Attorney 911 Fights Corporate Defendants Who Concealed the Science for Decades; Managed by Ralph Manginello (27+ Years Experience, $2.1B BP Texas City Refinery Pedigree) & Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Pena Who Knows Exactly How Travelers, CNA, Hartford & Zurich Historically Coded Claims to Deny You; Defeating Johns-Manville (Sumner Simpson Papers Proved They Knew Since the 1930s), 3M ($12.5B PFAS “Forever Chemical” Settlement), Monsanto/Bayer (Ghostwrote EPA Safety Studies — $10.9B Roundup Settlement), J&J ($4.69B Ingham Talc Verdict) & Every Industrial Opponent; Mesothelioma ($5M-$250M+), Benzene/AML Leukemia ($500K-$50M+), Roundup/NHL ($80M-$2.055B Verdicts), Camp Lejeune CLJA ($708M+ Paid) & Engineered Stone Silicosis (<5 Year Latency); $30B+ in 60+ Active Asbestos Trusts Eroding 8% Annually, FELA Railroad Heritage, Maritime Jones Act, RECA Radiation ($150K+), Philips CPAP ($1.1B), Texas 2-Year Discovery Rule SOL from Diagnosis & Median Survival 12-21 Months — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, 1-888-ATTY-911, Hablamos Espanol
Your Health Was the Price They Paid: The Fight for Justice in Queen City Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injury Claims For decades, the men and women who kept the steam lines running at the International Paper Red River Mill in Domino and maintained the locomotives passing through the rail yards of Queen City did more than just build a life for their families. They were the engine of Cass County’s economy, working in environments where white asbestos dust settled like frost on their coveralls and benzene vapors from industrial solvents were as common as the morning mist off the Red River. While these workers were being told their coughs were just a "mill hack" or part of the job, the corporations that manufactured the insulation, gaskets, and chemicals they handled every day already had the studies in their filing cabinets proving these substances were lethal. In City of Queen City, the legacy of industrial pride is too often followed by the devastating discovery of a life-threatening diagnosis. Whether it is a retired millwright learning they have mesothelioma or a younger railroad worker facing acute myeloid leukemia (AML), the pattern of corporate betrayal remains the same. You went to work, you…