City of Memphis Mesothelioma, Asbestos & Toxic Exposure Attorneys: Attorney 911 Brings 27+ Years of Fighting Corporations Who Concealed the Science for Decades to Hall County; Ralph Manginello (BP Texas City Refinery Explosion Pedigree, $2.1B Case) and Former Insurance Defense Insider Lupe Pena Expose How Travelers, CNA, and Hartford Managed Asbestos Claims to Minimize Payouts; We Secure Maximum Compensation for Mesothelioma (Verdicts $5M-$250M+), Benzene AML Leukemia ($500K-$50M+), Roundup NHL ($10.9B Bayer Settlement), and Silicosis for BNSF Railroad Workers, Agricultural Applicators, and Navy Veterans; We Navigate 11 Simultaneous Compensation Pathways Including 60+ Asbestos Trust Funds ($30B+), Camp Lejeune CLJA ($708M+ Paid), RECA Radiation ($150K+), PACT Act, and Jones Act Maritime; From Johns-Manville’s 1930s Sumner Simpson Papers to Monsanto’s Ghostwritten Studies and 3M’s PFAS Data (EPA 4 PPT MCL), We Deploy IARC Group 1 Science and OSHA 29 CFR 1910.1001 Experts; Texas Discovery Rule Starts the 2-Year SOL at Diagnosis — With Mesothelioma Survival At 12-21 Months and Trust Assets Eroding 8% Per Year, We File Immediately; Martindale-Hubbell 5.0, Federal Court Admitted, Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, 1-888-ATTY-911, Hablamos Espanol.
City of Memphis Mesothelioma & Toxic Exposure Lawyer: Holding Corporations Accountable for Hall County Workers and Families For generations, the men and women of the City of Memphis and across Hall County have built the backbone of the Texas Panhandle. You’ve worked the cotton gins that process the white gold of our plains, maintained the rails of the old Fort Worth and Denver Railway, operated the heavy rigs in the Panhandle oilfields, and kept our construction sites moving along U.S. 287. You did this work with pride, often in the heat of a Texas summer or the biting wind of a Panhandle winter, thinking you were providing a safe future for your children and grandchildren. What many big corporations didn’t tell you—and what we are here to expose—is that the very air you breathed at those job sites was often saturated with invisible killers. Whether it was the microscopic asbestos fibers used to insulate ricketily built industrial machines, the benzene vapors drifting through oilfield transport lines, or the toxic pesticides sprayed across our agricultural acreage, the companies that manufactured these substances knew the risks. They had the studies, they had the internal memos, and they had the warnings from their…