City of Snyder Mesothelioma, Asbestos & Oilfield Toxic Exposure Attorneys: Attorney 911 Brings 27+ Years of Experience and Ralph Manginello’s BP Texas City Refinery Explosion Pedigree ($2.1B Total Case) to Scurry County Families; We Feature a Former Insurance Defense Attorney Who Knows Exactly How Travelers, CNA, Hartford & Zurich Historically Coded Asbestos Claims to Deny Victims; Fighting for Mesothelioma Verdicts ($5M-$250M+), Benzene/AML Leukemia ($500K-$50M+), Roundup/NHL ($10.9B Bayer Master Settlement), Frac Sand Silicosis, and PFAS ($12.5B 3M Settlement) by Exposing Johns-Manville (Sumner Simpson Papers, 1930s), Monsanto (Ghostwritten EPA Studies), 3M (Hid Data Since 1960s) & J&J (Internal Talc Memos 1970s); Accessing $30B+ Across 60+ Asbestos Trust Funds and Navigating the Texas 2-Year Discovery Rule Where the SOL Starts at Diagnosis, Not Exposure; Whether You Served at Camp Lejeune ($708M+ Paid) or Worked for Halliburton, ExxonMobil, or Schlumberger in the Permian Basin, We Advance All Industrial Hygiene and Medical Expert Costs; Same-Day Spoliation Letters Lock Down MSDS and OSHA 300 Logs Before Corporate Defendants Destroy Evidence; Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, 1-888-ATTY-911, Hablamos Espanol
The Cost of the Scurry County Oil Patch: Holding Corporations Accountable for Toxic Exposure and Industrial Injury in City of Snyder For seventy-five years, the men and women of the City of Snyder have powered the Texas economy from the heart of the Permian Basin, working the rigs and the processing plants of the SACROC unit and the surrounding Scurry County oil fields. You did the heavy lifting that built this region, often breathing in a thick mix of drilling mud chemicals, pipe dope, and the fine white dust of asbestos insulation that lined the steam pipes of legacy production units. You were told the cough was just part of the job—the "West Texas dust"—but for many City of Snyder families, that cough was actually the first sign of a cellular betrayal caused by corporations that knew their products were lethal and chose to keep the rigs running anyway. Whether you spent your career as a roughneck on a Patterson-UTI rig, maintained the lines for Kinder Morgan, worked the BNSF rail yards near Highway 84, or handled industrial solvents at a local chemical facility, you did your part. Now, if you are facing a diagnosis of mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia,…