City of Webster Hurricane Beryl Personal Injury, Wrongful Death, Utility Failure and Insurance Bad Faith Attorneys — Attorney911 (The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC): Ralph Manginello’s 27+ Years of Federal Trial Experience and Lupe Peña’s Insider Knowledge as a Former Insurance Defense Attorney Who Conducts Consultations in Fluent Spanish, We Litigate the CenterPoint Energy MDL No. 24-0659 in Harris County District Court (Four Consolidated Class Actions Seeking $300M+) for Negligence and Breach of PUC Substantive Rule 25.53, TWIA and Admitted-Carrier Wind-vs-Flood Denials Under the USAA v. Menchaca Independent-Injury Rule and Leonard v. Nationwide ACC-Clause Canon, Representing Senior-Living Heat-Stress and Dialysis-Facility Loss-of-Power Deaths Under Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ch. 71 and Chapter 41 Punitive Damages with the Coates v. Whittington Eggshell-Plaintiff Doctrine, We Pull CenterPoint Substation Outage Logs and Medical-Examiner Records with 48-Hour Evidence Preservation and Same-Day Spoliation Letters, $50M+ Total Recovered for Texas Families, Tex. Ins. Code §542A.003 61-Day Notice and §542.060 18% Statutory Interest, Two-Year SOL Expires July 2026 — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Recover Compensation for You, Hablamos Español, 1-888-ATTY-911
Hurricane Beryl Personal Injury, Wrongful Death, Property Damage, Utility Failure, and Insurance Bad Faith Attorneys in Webster: The Complete Guide for Survivors and Families The landscape of the City of Webster changed forever on July 8, 2024. When Hurricane Beryl made landfall near Matagorda as a Category 1 storm with 80-mph winds, the immediate physical impact was just the beginning of a multi-year crisis for our community. While the wind-field was technically classified as a Category 1, the resulting utility failure and the 14-day power-outage cascade inside Webster created a humanitarian emergency that the civil justice system is still processing. If you are a Webster resident reading this today, we know you may still be living in the aftermath. You might be the widow of a senior who suffered hyperthermia in an assisted living facility near the NASA 1 corridor. You might be the homeowner in a Webster neighborhood still fighting a denied windstorm claim two years later. You might be the small business owner on the Gulf Freeway whose refrigerated inventory spoiled while the lights stayed dark. Whatever your story, we are here to help you understand the statutory frameworks—from the Texas Insurance Code to the Stafford Act—that determine…