City of Abbott Mesothelioma, Asbestos & Toxic Exposure Lawyers: Attorney 911 Features Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Pena Who Knows Exactly How Travelers, CNA, Hartford, Liberty Mutual, AIG & Zurich Historically Coded Asbestos Claims to Deny Victims — Now He Uses That Playbook Against Them; Led by Ralph Manginello’s 27+ Years Fighting BP Texas City Refinery ($2.1B Case), We Extract The Sumner Simpson Papers Proving Johns-Manville Knew Since the 1930s, Monsanto’s Ghostwritten EPA Roundup Studies, and 3M’s Internal PFAS Bioaccumulation Data; Mesothelioma Verdicts $500K-$250M+ (10-50 Year Latency), Benzene/AML Leukemia ($500K-$50M+ under 29 CFR 1910.1028), Silicosis (<5 Year Latency for Stone Fabricators), and the $30B+ Asbestos Trust Fund ($3.3M+ Claims Paid); Serving Hill County Railroad Workers (FELA), Farmers (Roundup NHL), and Veterans Exposed at Camp Lejeune ($708M+ Paid); Texas Discovery Rule 2-Year SOL Starts at Diagnosis, Not Exposure — Same-Day Spoliation Letters Lock Down MSDS and OSHA Logs; Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, 1-888-ATTY-911, Hablamos Espanol
Abbott Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injury: The Manginello Law Firm Accountability Report for Hill County Workers You didn't know. For twenty years, thirty years, or a career spent in the cotton fields, grain elevators, and industrial corridors of Abbott, you went to work, did your job, and came home to your family in Hill County. Nobody told you the dust you breathed while working near the Union Pacific lines, the herbicides you sprayed on Hill County acreage, or the insulation you handled in older Abbott buildings would one day try to kill you. Now you know. And now you have rights. The cough started six months ago. Then the shortness of breath that you used to blame on the Texas heat. Then the doctor said a word you’d only heard on television commercials: mesothelioma. Or perhaps it was acute myeloid leukemia. Suddenly, everything you thought you knew about your years working in and around Abbott changed forever. Whether you were a railroad maintainer on the lines running through Abbott, a hand at a local cotton gin, or a construction worker on the never-ending I-35 expansion projects in Hill County, your illness is not an accident of fate. It is a…