The Silent Betrayal: Protecting Toxic Exposure Victims and Industrial Workers in Cibolo and Guadalupe County
You didn’t know. For twenty years, thirty years, or even longer, you woke up in your home in Cibolo, drove to the job site, did the hard work required of you, and came back to your family. Nobody told you that the dust coating your clothes, the sweet-smelling chemicals on your hands, or the insulation you cut and fitted during the expansion of Guadalupe County’s industrial footprint would one day try to take your life. Now, a diagnosis has changed everything. The cough that wouldn’t go away, the unexplained fatigue, or the devastating news of mesothelioma or leukemia has turned your world upside down. There is a word for what happened to you. It isn’t bad luck, and it isn’t just “part of the job.” It is exposure. It is a silent betrayal by corporations that valued production over your life, and at Attorney 911, we are here to hold them accountable.
If you are a worker or a resident in Cibolo, Guadalupe County, or the surrounding I-35 and I-10 industrial corridors who has been diagnosed with a life-altering illness, you are likely processing decades of betrayal in a single moment. The companies that manufactured the products you handled knew the risks. They had the studies. They had the internal memos. They chose to remain silent while you breathed in toxins that are now destroying your health. Our firm, led by Ralph Manginello and backed by the insider perspective of former insurance defense attorney Lupe Peña, provides the aggressive, scientifically-grounded advocacy you need to fight back. We don’t just file claims; we investigate the molecular truth of your exposure to secure the maximum compensation your family deserves.
Cibolo is no longer just a quiet suburb; it is a vital part of the Texas industrial engine. As the construction boom continues across Guadalupe County and the logistics hubs expand near Randolph Air Force Base, the risks to workers have never been higher. Whether you were exposed to asbestos in legacy buildings, handled benzene-containing solvents in a local shop, or suffered a catastrophic injury on a modern job site, your rights don’t expire just because the exposure happened years ago. We know the history of Guadalupe County’s workforce, and we know exactly how corporate defendants try to hide behind the “exclusive remedy” of workers’ compensation. We are here to tell you that workers’ comp is rarely the end of the road. Call us at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential case evaluation.
The Nuclear Advantage: Why Attorney 911 Is Different
When you are diagnosed with a disease like mesothelioma or acute myeloid leukemia (AML), you aren’t just fighting a medical battle; you are entering a legal war against billion-dollar corporations and their massive insurance providers. These defendants have spent the last fifty years perfecting the art of denying toxic exposure claims. They hire “product defense” scientists to muddy the waters and use procedural delay tactics to wait out terminal patients. To beat them, you need a firm that understands their playbook from the inside.
Our managing partner, Ralph Manginello, brings over 27 years of high-stakes litigation experience to your case. Ralph is admitted to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas and has a career-defining history of holding massive entities accountable, including his role in the landmark BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation, which resulted in a $2.1 billion total resolution. Ralph understands the scale of corporate negligence, and he knows that for families in Cibolo, these cases aren’t just about “damages”—they are about survival and justice.
The nuclear differentiator for our clients is our associate attorney, Lupe Peña. Before joining our team to fight for the injured, Lupe worked on the defense side for major insurance companies. He sat in the rooms where they decided which claims to deny and how to minimize the suffering of workers. He knows exactly how corporate defense teams build their case against you because he used to build those cases himself. Today, he uses that “spy-level” intelligence to anticipate their moves, dismantle their junk science, and ensure the insurance adjusters in Guadalupe County don’t get away with lowballing your family.
We are a small firm by choice, providing a “small-town” level of personal attention to Cibolo residents while wielding the “big-city” legal firepower required to win. When you call 1-888-ATTY-911, you aren’t talking to a call center in another state. You are talking to a team that knows Cibolo’s history, Guadalupe County’s court system, and the specific industrial sites that have defined our region. We offer 24/7 availability and bilingual services—hablamos español—because we believe every worker, regardless of their background or immigration status, deserves a world-class defense.
TIER 1 ANCHOR: Mesothelioma & Asbestos Exposure in Guadalupe County
Mesothelioma is a devastating, aggressive cancer that affects the mesothelium—the thin protective lining of the lungs (pleural), abdomen (peritoneal), heart (pericardial), or testicles. For workers in Cibolo and across Texas, mesothelioma has only one primary cause: exposure to asbestos. Asbestos is not a single substance, but a group of naturally occurring silicate minerals that were used for decades in construction, shipbuilding, refining, and manufacturing because of their heat-resistant properties.
The Biological Mechanism: How Asbestos Kills at the Cellular Level
The science of asbestos exposure is what sets our advocacy apart. When you inhale or ingest asbestos fibers, you are taking in microscopic needles—typically 0.1 to 10 micrometers in size—that are invisible and odorless. In Cibolo’s legacy industrial sites and older building stock, these fibers were released into the air every time insulation was cut, gaskets were replaced, or ceiling tiles were disturbed.
Once inhaled, these fibers travel deep into the lower lobes of the lungs, where they reach the alveoli and eventually penetrate into the pleural lining. This is where the “silent latency” begins. Asbestos fibers are “biopersistent,” meaning your body has no biological mechanism to break them down, dissolve them, or expel them. Your immune system recognizes the fibers as foreign and sends macrophages to engulf and destroy them. However, because the fibers are too long and rigid, the macrophages fail in a process called “frustrated phagocytosis.”
As the macrophages die trying to destroy the asbestos, they release inflammatory cytokines (such as TNF-α and IL-1β) and reactive oxygen species (ROS). This creates a localized, chronic inflammatory environment that lasts for 15 to 50 years. Over these decades, the ongoing oxidative stress causes cumulative DNA damage in the mesothelial cells. Specifically, it leads to the inactivation of critical tumor suppressor genes, such as BAP1 and NF2. After thousands of rounds of failed cell division and accumulated mutations, a single mesothelial cell undergoes malignant transformation, leading to the rapid and uncontrollable growth of mesothelioma tumors.
Recognizing the Symptoms in Cibolo Victims
Because of the 20 to 50-year latency period, many Cibolo residents who were exposed in the 1970s, 80s, or 90s are only now being diagnosed. The symptoms move through three stages, often mimicking more common ailments:
- Early Detection Triggers: A persistent, dry cough that doesn’t resolve with antibiotics; mild chest wall pain that worsens with deep breathing; and an increasing shortness of breath during routine activities, like walking through a Cibolo park or carrying groceries.
- Intermediate Progression: Severe pleuritic chest pain that may radiate to the shoulder blade; a cough that becomes productive of blood-tinged sputum; and significant, unintentional weight loss of 15 to 30 pounds within a few months.
- Late-Stage Indicators: Night sweats that soak through your sheets; difficulty swallowing (dysphagia); and visible lumps or masses under the skin of the chest or abdomen.
If you recognize these symptoms and have a history of working in Guadalupe County’s construction, HVAC, or industrial sectors, you must tell your doctor about your asbestos exposure history immediately. A diagnosis of Stage IV pleural mesothelioma often carries a median survival of 12 to 21 months, but aggressive multimodal therapy (surgery, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy) can extend life in many cases.
The Billion-Dollar Trust Funds Are Waiting
The companies that manufactured asbestos products—entities like Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and W.R. Grace—knew about these health risks as early as the 1930s. The “Sumner Simpson” letters from 1935 prove that corporate executives actively conspired to suppress medical research, writing, “The less said about asbestos, the better off we are.”
When these companies finally faced the consequences of their actions, many filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. As a result, over 60 active asbestos bankruptcy trust funds were established, currently holding approximately $30 billion in assets to compensate future victims. You may be eligible to file claims with 5 to 10 separate trusts simultaneously, in addition to pursuing lawsuits against companies that are still solvent. However, these trusts have “payment percentages” that decline as more claims are filed. Waiting to file can cost your family hundreds of thousands of dollars. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today to begin the process of identifying every trust fund you qualify for.
AXIS 1: Benzene & Industrial Chemical Exposure in the I-35 Corridor
Cibolo’s proximity to major Texas refining and chemical hubs means that many local workers have spent years exposed to benzene. Benzene is a colorless, sweet-smelling liquid used in the production of plastics, resins, synthetic fibers, and detergents. It is also a natural component of crude oil and gasoline. For those working in automotive repair, fuel transport, or nearby petrochemical facilities, benzene is a silent killer that attacks the blood-forming organs.
The Bone Marrow Connection: Benzene-Induced Leukemia
Benzene doesn’t just make you sick; it rewrites your blood at the molecular level. When you inhale benzene vapors, approximately 50% of the substance is absorbed through the alveolar membranes in your lungs. Once in the bloodstream, it travels to the liver, where an enzyme called CYP2E1 metabolizes it into highly reactive compounds, including benzene oxide and muconaldehyde.
These metabolites concentrate in the bone marrow, where they attack hematopoietic stem cells—the master cells responsible for producing all your red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. The metabolites cause specific chromosomal aberrations, particularly translocations such as t(8;21) or inv(16). This damage triggers a progression from Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS)—a pre-leukemic state—to Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML).
- Benzene Exposure Triggers: If you worked with degreasers, glues, paints, or fuel in Guadalupe County and now suffer from easy bruising, frequent infections, or severe fatigue that doesn’t improve with rest, you may be experiencing the effects of benzene toxicity.
- The Regulatory Failure: The OSHA permissible exposure limit (PEL) for benzene is 1 part per million (ppm). However, scientific consensus research shows that there is no safe level of benzene exposure. IARC classifies benzene as a Group 1 human carcinogen. If your employer allowed you to work in environments where the smell of gasoline or solvents was constant, they likely exceeded the PEL by 10 to 100 times, significantly increasing your risk of AML.
At Attorney 911, we investigate the “exposure timeline” of your career. We reconstruct your work history and use industrial hygiene experts to prove that the products you handled contained benzene, and that your employer failed to provide the respirators and ventilation required by 29 CFR 1910.1028. Past benzene verdicts have reached as high as $725 million. Your fight for your life deserves a firm that knows exactly how to prove this molecular causation. Call us at 1-888-ATTY-911.
AXIS 1: PFAS / “Forever Chemicals” and Guadalupe County Water
The residents of Cibolo and Guadalupe County are increasingly concerned about PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances). Known as “forever chemicals” because the carbon-fluorine bond is one of the strongest in organic chemistry, PFAS do not break down in the environment or the human body. They bioaccumulate, meaning the levels in your blood increase every single time you are exposed.
The Sources of Contamination
In the Cibolo area, PFAS contamination typically stems from three sources:
- AFFF Firefighting Foam: Used extensively at military installations like Randolph Air Force Base during training exercises. The foam seeps into the groundwater and migrates into private wells and municipal water systems.
- Industrial Discharge: Local manufacturing plants that use PFAS in non-stick coatings, waterproof fabrics, or grease-resistant food packaging.
- Landfill Leaching: As products containing PFAS break down in Guadalupe County landfills, the chemicals can leach into the surrounding soil and water tables.
Health Consequences: Kidney, Thyroid, and Immune Suppression
PFAS exposure has been linked by the C8 Science Panel to six primary conditions: kidney cancer, testicular cancer, ulcerative colitis, thyroid disease, high cholesterol, and pregnancy-induced hypertension. PFAS molecules mimic natural fatty acids and disrupt the PPAR-α and PPAR-γ receptors in your liver and fat cells, leading to metabolic dysfunction and immune system suppression.
The EPA recently established a strict Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) of just 4 parts per trillion for PFOA and PFOS in drinking water. This reflects the reality that these chemicals are harmful in vanishingly small amounts. If you live near an industrial site or military base in Cibolo and have been diagnosed with kidney cancer or a thyroid disorder, contact Attorney 911. We are monitoring the $12.5 billion 3M settlement and other ongoing PFAS litigations to ensure Guadalupe County families get their share of accountability.
AXIS 1: Camp Lejeune Water Contamination (Veterans in Cibolo)
Cibolo has a high concentration of military veterans and active-duty personnel due to its proximity to San Antonio’s “Military City USA” infrastructure. Many of these residents, or their family members, may have been stationed at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina between 1953 and 1987. During this time, the water at Hadnot Point and Tarawa Terrace was contaminated with VOCs (volatile organic compounds) at levels up to 3,400 times higher than safety limits.
The Camp Lejeune Justice Act (CLJA)
The PACT Act, signed into law in 2022, includes the Camp Lejeune Justice Act, which allows anyone who lived or worked on base for at least 30 cumulative days between 1953 and 1987 to file a federal lawsuit for damages. This applies to veterans, civilian contractors, and children born on base.
- Qualifying Diseases: Bladder cancer, kidney cancer, liver cancer, Parkinson’s disease, multiple myeloma, and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
- The Multi-Pathway Advantage: Your right to file a CLJA claim is separate from your VA disability benefits. You can pursue both. As your attorneys, we help you navigate the Eastern District of North Carolina’s court system while ensuring your VA documentation stays intact.
The window to file these claims is narrowing. The government has already begun paying out hundreds of millions of dollars in “Elective Option” settlements, but many victims of the Hadnot Point contamination deserve significantly more than the government’s initial offer. Let Ralph and Lupe evaluate your service history and medical records to maximize your recovery from the Department of the Navy.
AXIS 1: Roundup / Glyphosate Exposure for Agricultural Workers
While Cibolo is rapidly urbanizing, Guadalupe County still has deep agricultural roots. Farmers, groundskeepers, and pesticide applicators in the region have used Roundup (glyphosate) for decades. In 2015, the World Health Organization’s IARC classified glyphosate as a Group 2A “probable human carcinogen.”
Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL)
Roundup causes cancer through genotoxicity and oxidative stress, specifically damaging the DNA of lymphoid cells. The “Monsanto Papers”—internal documents revealed in recent litigation—show that the company ghostwrote studies to downplay these risks while attacking independent scientists. If you have been diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma after regular Roundup use at your home or job in Cibolo, you are not alone. Juries have awarded billions of dollars in recent years to victims, including the landmark $2.25 billion verdict in Philadelphia. We represent Cibolo residents in pursuing these mass tort claims against Bayer/Monsanto.
AXIS 2: Dangerous Industry Workers — The Cibolo Construction Boom
If you work in construction in Cibolo, you are part of the engine driving Guadalupe County’s growth. However, construction has the highest fatality rate of any major industry. OSHA identifies the “Fatal Four” as falls, struck-by-object, electrocution, and caught-in/between.
Scaffold Falls and Third-Party Liability
When a scaffold fails on a Cibolo job site, the injuries are often catastrophic. A fall from just 10 feet can result in traumatic brain injury (TBI), spinal cord injury (SCI), and multiple fractures. While your employer may tell you that workers’ compensation is your “exclusive remedy,” they are often leaving out the most important part of the law:
Third-Party Claims: If your injury was caused by a defective scaffold component, a negligent general contractor, or a property owner who failed to maintain a safe site, you can sue those third parties directly. Unlike workers’ comp, a third-party lawsuit has no caps on damages and allows you to recover for pain and suffering, mental anguish, and full lost wages. In Texas, where many employers are “non-subscribers,” you may even be able to sue your direct employer for negligence.
Trench Collapse and Soil Pressure
A single cubic yard of soil weighs nearly 3,000 pounds—the same as a small car. When a trench in Cibolo collapses because it wasn’t properly shored or shielded per 29 CFR 1926 Subpart P, the worker buried inside faces immediate asphyxiation. The pressure prevents the lungs from expanding, and death occurs in minutes. Survival often results in “crush syndrome,” where muscle necrosis releases myoglobin into the bloodstream, leading to acute kidney failure. These accidents are 100% preventable. If a “competent person” failed to inspect the soil in Guadalupe County, we will hold them accountable for every dollar of your recovery.
AXIS 2: Maritime & Jones Act (The Offshore Bridge)
Texas is a maritime powerhouse. Many Cibolo residents don’t realize that if they work “in service of a vessel”—whether it’s an oil rig in the Gulf, a tugboat on the Intracoastal Waterway, or a barge on the San Antonio River—they are protected by the Jones Act (46 USC § 30104).
Seaman Status and the 30% Rule
If you spend 30% or more of your time working on a vessel, you are a “seaman” and have the right to sue your employer for negligence. This is a much more powerful right than standard workers’ comp. Under the Jones Act, your employer is liable if their negligence played even the smallest part in your injury (the “featherweight” burden of proof).
The Asbestos Bridge: Shipyard workers and seamen are among the highest-risk mesothelioma populations. Ships built before 1980 were saturated with asbestos insulation and gaskets. If you were a Guadalupe County resident who worked on a vessel and has now been diagnosed with mesothelioma, you have a “stacked” claim: a Jones Act negligence suit against the vessel owner AND asbestos trust fund claims against the product manufacturers.
AXIS 2: FELA Railroad Injuries (Union Pacific Workers)
The Union Pacific railroad lines run directly through Guadalupe County and nearby San Antonio, employing many local residents as engineers, conductors, and maintenance-of-way workers. If you are a railroad worker injured on the job in Cibolo, you are not covered by Texas workers’ compensation. Instead, you are protected by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA).
Relaxed Causation and Asbestos in Locomotives
FELA allows you to sue the railroad for negligence. Like the Jones Act, FELA uses a relaxed causation standard. Furthermore, many railroad veterans were exposed to massive amounts of asbestos in locomotive brake shoes, steam pipe insulation, and roundhouse facilities. If you have been diagnosed with lung cancer or mesothelioma after a career on the Guadalupe County rails, we can pursue a FELA claim for failure to provide a safe workplace, which often yields results far higher than any administrative workers’ comp program.
The Corporate Enemy: Exposing Their Playbook
In every case we handle for Cibolo families, we face a common enemy: the multi-layered corporate defense machine. These companies don’t just deny they hurt you; they actively try to discredit you. With Lupe Peña’s former insurance defense background, we know their 12 primary tactics and how to neutralize them:
- The Identification Defense: “You worked at ten different sites; you can’t prove our product caused your cancer.” Our Counter: We use the “substantial factor” test. Every asbestos fiber or benzene molecule contributed to your cumulative dose. We reconstruct your entire work history to pull every liable party into the net.
- The Statute of Limitations: “The exposure was 30 years ago; you’re too late.” Our Counter: The “Discovery Rule.” In Texas, the clock starts when you discover your diagnosis and its link to the exposure. We ensure your filing is timely and your rights are protected.
- The Exclusive Remedy Myth: “Workers’ comp is all you get.” Our Counter: We identify third-party liability—contractors, manufacturers, and premises owners—that bypasses workers’ comp caps and provides for full pain and suffering.
- The Blame-the-Victim Defense: “The plaintiff was a smoker.” Our Counter: Smoking does not cause mesothelioma. For lung cancer, asbestos and smoking have a synergistic effect (50x risk), meaning the defendant’s product made your habit 50 times more lethal. They owe you more for that increased risk, not less.
- The Delay Strategy: Waiting for terminal patients to pass away to reduce settlement value. Our Counter: We file for expedited trial preference and immediate depositions to preserve your testimony and secure your family’s future while you are still here to see it.
Evidence Preservation: What Cibolo Victims Need to Do Now
Evidence in toxic exposure cases doesn’t just disappear; it is actively destroyed. Buildings are demolished, records are shredded according to “retention schedules,” and witnesses move away. If you have been diagnosed with an exposure-related illness in Guadalupe County, time is your greatest enemy.
The Attorney 911 Triage Phase:
Within the first 14 days of your call, we send formal spoliation and preservation demands to your former employers and identified manufacturers. We subpoena:
- OSHA 300 logs and industrial hygiene air sampling reports.
- Material Safety Data Sheets (SDS) for all chemicals used at your Cibolo job site.
- Medical surveillance and pulmonary function test records.
- Employment rosters to identify co-workers who can testify to the dust levels at the facility.
We don’t wait for the discovery phase of a lawsuit to start. We move to capture the molecular and documentary proof of your exposure before it’s gone. As Bethany B. wrote in her review: “Ralph took a bogus case and had it dismissed within a week… a God-send law firm.” While toxic exposure cases take longer than a week, we bring that same “911 urgency” to every investigation.
Compensation Pathways: What Is Your Case Worth?
We never make false guarantees, but the data of toxic tort litigation in Texas is clear. Families in Cibolo who pursue multiple recovery pathways-stacking trust fund claims, third-party lawsuits, and VA benefits-see significantly higher outcomes.
- Mesothelioma Settlements: Average between $1 million and $2 million. Verdicts across Texas and the U.S. routinely reach $5 million to $50 million+, especially when punitive damages are awarded for corporate concealment.
- Benzene/AML Recoveries: Settlements often range from $500,000 to $2 million+ depending on the duration of exposure and the employer’s history of safety violations.
- Construction Fatalities/Catastrophic Injuries: Can range from $1 million to $10 million+ when third-party negligence is proven, bypassing the limitations of workers’ comp.
You pay absolutely nothing upfront. We work on a contingency fee basis, meaning we advance all the costs of the litigation—the $500/hour expert witnesses, the pathology reviews, the industrial hygienists—and we only get paid if you receive a settlement or a verdict. This removes every financial barrier for Cibolo residents facing medical debt.
Local Resources for Cibolo and Guadalupe County Residents
A legal claim is only half the battle. Your health is the priority. Cibolo is uniquely positioned near some of the most authoritative medical institutions in the world:
- Mays Cancer Center (UT Health San Antonio MD Anderson): Only 30 minutes from Cibolo, this NCI-designated cancer center provides the thoracic oncology and hematology specialists required for mesothelioma and leukemia treatment.
- The South Texas Veterans Health Care System (Audie L. Murphy VA Medical Center): The primary resource for Cibolo veterans to receive free PACT Act toxic exposure screenings.
- Texas Oncology (San Antonio): With multiple locations in Northeast San Antonio near Cibolo, they provide community-based chemotherapy and immunotherapy access close to home.
- Clinical Trials: Search ClinicalTrials.gov for “mesothelioma” or “AML” in the San Antonio/Cibolo area to find emerging treatments being tested right now.
The medical records generated at these world-class facilities are the backbone of your legal case. Getting the best care in Guadalupe County is building the best case.
Frequently Asked Questions for Cibolo Residents
1. What if my Cibolo employer is out of business?
Many industrial employers from Guadalupe County’s past have set up bankruptcy trust funds specifically for this reason. Even if the company is gone, the $30 billion in trust assets remains available to compensate you. We also investigate parent companies and successor corporations that may still be solvent and liable.
2. Can I file a claim if I never worked in a plant, but my spouse did?
Yes. This is called secondary or “take-home” exposure. Asbestos fibers on work clothes carried into Cibolo homes during the 1970s and 80s have caused mesothelioma in spouses and children decades later. Many courts recognize the employer’s liability for these family member injuries.
3. Will filing a lawsuit result in my Cibolo employer firing me?
Retaliation for filing a safety complaint or a toxic exposure claim is illegal under both federal (OSHA Section 11c) and Texas state law. If your employer retaliates, we add a separate, powerful claim for whistleblower retaliation to your case.
4. I’m a smoker. Can I still file a mesothelioma claim?
Absolutely. Smoking does not cause mesothelioma. The asbestos manufacturers will try to use your smoking to distract the jury, but the science is clear: only asbestos causes mesothelioma. We have successfully represented many smokers in toxic exposure cases.
5. How long does a toxic exposure case take in Guadalupe County?
While the government’s Camp Lejeune or RECA programs move according to federal timelines, a civil lawsuit in Texas typically takes 12 to 24 months. However, for terminally ill patients in Cibolo, we file for expedited dockets that can result in pre-trial settlements in as little as 6 to 12 months.
Action and Accountability for Cibolo Families
The corporation that poisoned you has a team of lawyers specializing in protecting their profits. Now, you have a team specializing in protecting you. Ralph Manginello, Lupe Peña, and the entire Attorney 911 team are ready to move from discovery to understanding, and from anger to action.
Your time at a Guadalupe County refinery, your service at a military base, or your years building the Cibolo skyline should have been rewarded with a peaceful retirement. Instead, you were handed a diagnosis. We cannot undo the biology of your disease, but we can make the companies that caused it pay for the medical bills, the pain, and the future they took from you.
As Chad H. wrote in his verified review: “A true PIT BULL and fighter. He don’t play… we would not know what we would have done without the help of Atty. Manginello and his team.” Join the 272+ clients who have rated us 4.9 out of 5 stars.
The trust fund assets are depleting. The evidence is being destroyed. The statute of limitations is ticking. Don’t let another day pass without knowing your rights.
Call Attorney 911 today at 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911).
We are available 24/7. Your consultation is free. You pay no fee unless we win your case.
Principal Office: Houston, Texas. Serving Cibolo, Guadalupe County, and all of Texas.
Attorney 911: Because the companies that knew shouldn’t be the ones that decide what your life is worth.