City of Little River-Academy Toxic Exposure and Dangerous Industrial Injury Advocacy
For generations, the families of City of Little River-Academy provided the backbone for Central Texas’s agricultural, railroad, and industrial progress. You worked the blackland prairie soil in the Little River valley, you maintained the BNSF and Union Pacific lines that cut through Bell County, and you braved the high-heat construction sites across the Temple-Belton-Academy corridor. You did your job with the expectation that the companies you worked for and the products you used were safe. You didn’t know that the dust you inhaled, the water you drank near military installations like Fort Cavazos, or the chemicals you handled in the fields would one day threaten your life.
If you or a loved one in City of Little River-Academy has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia (AML), non-Hodgkin lymphoma, or has suffered a catastrophic injury on a Bell County job site, you are processing a sense of profound betrayal. This wasn’t an accident. It was the result of decisions made in wood-paneled boardrooms decades ago—decisions to prioritize corporate profit over the cellular health of workers in City of Little River-Academy.
We are Attorney 911. Our firm is led by Ralph Manginello, a trial attorney with over 27 years of experience who was part of the litigation team that held British Petroleum (BP) accountable for the Texas City Refinery explosion—a case involving 15 deaths and over $2.1 billion in total resolution. We are joined by Lupe Peña, a former insurance defense insider who used to evaluate these claims for the billion-dollar corporations. He knows the playbook they use to deny City of Little River-Academy families their right to compensation. We don’t just “handle” cases; we dismantle corporate defenses from the inside out.
The companies that exposed you have an army of lawyers. They’ve had them since the 1940s when they first started hiding the truth about asbestos and benzene. You deserve a team in City of Little River-Academy that knows the science, the regulations, and the specific industrial history of Bell County. Call us at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential evaluation of your rights.
The Scientific Reality of Toxic Exposure in City of Little River-Academy
Toxic exposure is fundamentally different from a car wreck. While an accident on Highway 95 is a moment of acute crisis, toxic exposure is a “molecular accident” that happens over years or decades. The damage occurs at the cellular level, often remaining invisible until a devastating diagnosis surfaces 20 to 50 years later. In City of Little River-Academy, we see these latent-onset diseases manifesting in retired railroad workers, farmers, and veterans every day.
Mesothelioma and the Biological Failure of the Macrophage
Mesothelioma is a terminal cancer of the mesothelial lining caused almost exclusively by asbestos exposure. For decades, industrial sites and construction projects in the City of Little River-Academy area utilized asbestos-containing materials (ACMs) in insulation, pipe lagging, and gaskets.
When you worked with these materials, you inhaled microscopic asbestos fibers. These fibers, some as small as five micrometers, are “biopersistent.” Because of their jagged, needle-like structure (particularly amphibole fibers), your body cannot break them down or expel them. Your immune system sends macrophages—specialized white blood cells—to engulf and destroy the foreign fibers.
This is where the biological disaster begins: the asbestos fibers are too long for the macrophages to completely surround. This leads to “frustrated phagocytosis.” The macrophage ruptures, releasing inflammatory cytokines like TNF-alpha and IL-1beta, along with reactive oxygen species (ROS). This creates a permanent state of chronic inflammation in the pleural lining of your lungs or the peritoneal lining of your abdomen. Over 15 to 50 years, this oxidative stress causes DNA strand breaks and deactivates tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and NF2. The result is the malignant transformation of mesothelial cells into mesothelioma.
Attorney Ralph Manginello has seen the devastation this diagnosis brings to City of Little River-Academy families. We understand that your “exposure” wasn’t a choice; it was a consequence of corporate silence. Understanding this cellular mechanism is the first step in proving that your disease was caused by a specific product handled on a Bell County job site.
Benzene Metabolism and Bone Marrow Toxicity
Benzene is a clear, sweet-smelling chemical found in petroleum products, industrial solvents, and gasoline. For workers in City of Little River-Academy who spent time at refineries in the broader Texas Gulf Coast region or worked in heavy vehicle maintenance in Temple, benzene exposure is a primary concern.
Benzene does not cause cancer directly; its metabolites do. When you inhale benzene vapor, your liver processes it using the enzyme CYP2E1. This metabolic pathway converts benzene into benzene oxide, and eventually into highly reactive metabolites like hydroquinone and muconaldehyde.
These compounds concentrate in the bone marrow, where blood cells are born. They cause specific chromosomal translocations—particularly t(8;21) and inv(16)—which are pathognomonic markers of benzene exposure. This damage disrupts the production of hematopoietic stem cells, leading to Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS) or Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML).
Lupe Peña’s experience as a former defense attorney gives us a window into how companies try to blame these cancers on “genetics” or “lifestyle.” We counter that junk science with the hard molecular truth. If you worked with solvents or fuels in City of Little River-Academy and now face a blood cancer diagnosis, the chemistry of your own body may provide the evidence needed to hold the manufacturer accountable.
PFAS and the “Forever Chemical” Accumulation
PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are synthetic chemicals used in firefighting foam (AFFF) and industrial coatings. Given the proximity of City of Little River-Academy to Fort Cavazos, the risk of groundwater contamination and occupational exposure for veterans and civilian contractors is high.
PFAS molecules are held together by carbon-fluorine bonds, the strongest in organic chemistry. This makes them practically indestructible in the environment and in the human body. Once ingested or inhaled, PFAS binds to serum albumin and bioaccumulates in the liver, kidneys, and blood.
The primary health risk involves the disruption of the PPAR-alpha and PPAR-gamma nuclear receptors. This disruption interferes with lipid metabolism and thyroid hormone signaling, leading to kidney cancer, testicular cancer, ulcerative colitis, and thyroid disease. For residents of City of Little River-Academy, the “latency period” for PFAS-related diseases can be shorter than asbestos, with symptoms appearing within 5 to 15 years of sustained exposure.
Your Rights as an Injured Worker in City of Little River-Academy
Many workers in Bell County believe that if they are injured on the job or diagnosed with an occupational disease, workers’ compensation is their only option. In City of Little River-Academy, employers often encourage this belief because workers’ comp protects the company from being sued for full damages, including pain and suffering.
At Attorney 911, we know this is a corporate myth.
The Third-Party Claim: Your Pathway Around Workers’ Comp
While you generally cannot sue your direct employer in Texas if they carry workers’ compensation insurance, you have a non-negotiable right to sue third parties whose negligence contributed to your harm. In City of Little River-Academy, this often includes:
- Product Manufacturers: The companies that made the asbestos insulation, the benzene-laden solvents, or the defective Roundup you used in Bell County fields.
- Property Owners/Premises Liability: If you were a contractor working at a major manufacturing facility in Temple or a power plant in the region and the owner failed to warn you of toxic hazards.
- Equipment Manufacturers: If a crane collapse, scaffold failure, or trench cave-in was caused by design defects in the machinery.
- Contractors and Subcontractors: If another company on the job site in City of Little River-Academy created the unsafe condition that led to your injury.
Third-party claims are vital because they have no cap on damages. Unlike workers’ comp, which only pays a portion of your wages and medical bills, a third-party lawsuit can recover for your physical impairment, mental anguish, loss of consortium, and punitive damages intended to punish the corporation for its conduct.
Ralph Manginello and his team focus on identifying every possible defendant. We investigate the maintenance logs, the procurement records, and the internal memos of every company involved in your City of Little River-Academy project to ensure no money is left on the table. Join the 270+ clients who have rated us 4.9 stars on Google because we don’t back down from these complex multi-defendant battles.
FELA Claims for City of Little River-Academy Railroad Workers
Railroad lines are a defining feature of the Bell County landscape. If you worked for BNSF or Union Pacific and were exposed to asbestos in locomotive brakes, diesel exhaust in the yards, or creosote on the ties, you are not covered by workers’ compensation. Instead, you are protected by the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA).
FELA is a powerful federal law that allows railroaders to sue their employers directly for negligence. Crucially, the “burden of proof” under FELA is significantly lower than in a standard personal injury case. You only need to show that the railroad’s negligence played “any part, however slight,” in causing your illness or injury.
We represent track workers, conductors, engineers, and shop mechanics in City of Little River-Academy who are facing the long-term effects of railroad-related toxic exposure. As Ralph explains in this episode of the Attorney 911 podcast, FELA laws were built to protect you, but the railroads have spent a century trying to undermine them. We ensure they don’t succeed in your case.
The Corporate Enemy: Documented Concealment
The reason we fight so aggressively for City of Little River-Academy families is rooted in a history of corporate malice. The cancers being diagnosed today at Baylor Scott & White in Temple aren’t “unforeseen side effects.” They are the results of a cover-up that spanned the 20th century.
The Asbestos Conspiracy
In 1935, the president of Raybestos-Manhattan, Sumner Simpson, wrote a letter to the vice president of Johns-Manville regarding the emerging medical evidence that asbestos was killing their workers. His words were chilling: “The less said about asbestos, the better off we are.”
This wasn’t just a private conversation; it was the start of an industry-wide effort to suppress research. For decades, companies like Owens Corning, W.R. Grace, and United States Gypsum continued to sell products to City of Little River-Academy contractors while their own internal medical departments warned of the cancer risk. They hid the truth from you, the worker, and from your family, who may have been exposed to “take-home” asbestos when you brought the white dust home on your work clothes to Little River.
The Monsanto Papers and Roundup
In the agricultural fields surrounding Academy High School, Roundup became a household name. But the “Monsanto Papers”—internal documents unsealed in federal court—revealed that Monsanto (now Bayer) ghostwrote scientific studies to make glyphosate appear safe while actively working to discredit the World Health Organization’s IARC findings.
The IARC classified glyphosate as a “probable human carcinogen” in 2015, linking it directly to Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. In recent years, juries have awarded billions of dollars in punitive damages against Monsanto, including the landmark $2.25 billion verdict in Philadelphia in early 2024. These verdicts reflect a growing public realization: City of Little River-Academy farmers were used as test subjects for a product the company knew was dangerous.
ExxonMobil and the Benzene Disclosure Failure
Refinery giants like ExxonMobil have a massive presence in Texas. Their own internal reports from the 1940s and 50s documented the link between benzene and leukemia. Yet, for decades, they maintained that “safe” levels of exposure existed, even as they fought OSHA’s attempts to lower the permissible exposure limit (PEL).
In 2024, a Pennsylvania jury sent a massive signal to the industry with a $725 million verdict against ExxonMobil for a mechanic’s benzene-related AML. This confirms what Ralph Manginello has maintained throughout his career: when corporations hide hazards, they deserve to pay.
Multi-Pathway Compensation for City of Little River-Academy Families
When we represent a client in City of Little River-Academy, we don’t just file one lawsuit. We create a “Compensation Stack” to maximize your recovery. A single mesothelioma diagnosis can trigger multiple sources of money:
- Asbestos Bankruptcy Trusts: There are over 60 active trusts with an estimated $30 billion in assets. These were created by companies like Johns-Manville and Halliburton (DII Industries) to pay victims even after the company filed for bankruptcy. We handle the complex filing requirements for funds like the Western Asbestos Settlement Trust and the Manville Trust, which currently pays roughly 5% of scheduled values.
- Civil Litigation: We sue the solvent, multi-billion-dollar companies that are still in business—the ones who can’t hide behind a trust. This focuses on companies like John Crane Inc. or GE, who used asbestos in their turbines and pumps.
- VA Disability Benefits: If your exposure occurred while serving at Fort Cavazos or aboard a Navy ship, we help you navigate the VA’s service-connection process. This is separate from your legal claim and provides tax-free monthly income.
- RECA and PACT Act Benefits: Federal programs explicitly designed for veterans exposed to radiation, burn pits, or Camp Lejeune’s contaminated water.
Wait time is the enemy of your recovery. Asbestos trust fund payment percentages can drop as they pay out more claims. Statutes of limitations in Texas are strict—2 years from the date you discovered the cause of your illness. If you are in City of Little River-Academy and facing a terminal diagnosis, we can petition the court for an expedited trial docket, bringing your case to a resolution in months rather than years.
Dangerous Industry Accidents in Bell County
While latent disease is a quiet killer, the construction and industrial projects in the Little River-Academy area present immediate, catastrophic risks. Ralph Manginello’s experience in the BP Texas City litigation established our firm’s reputation as the “Legal 911” for industrial disasters.
Construction Site Fatalities and the “Fatal Four”
The rapid development along the Temple-Belton-Academy axis has led to a spike in construction accidents. According to OSHA, the “Fatal Four” (falls, struck-by, electrocution, and caught-in/between) account for over 60% of construction deaths.
- Scaffold Falls: Under 29 CFR 1926.451, your employer is required to provide fall protection for any work over 10 feet. If they failed to provide a harness or a solid platform on a City of Little River-Academy job site, that is negligence.
- Crane Collapses: The $860 million Dallas crane verdict proved that companies cannot blame “unexpected wind” for structural failures. Crane operators must be certified, and ground conditions must be inspected per OSHA Subpart CC.
- Trench Cave-ins: Soil is incredibly heavy—one cubic yard weighs as much as a car. Excavations deeper than 5 feet require shoring or trench boxes. If a worker is buried in City of Little River-Academy, the employer has violated federal safety standards. As Ralph discusses in this video on construction accidents, these injuries are almost always preventable with basic compliance.
Industrial Explosions and Process Safety Management
If you were injured in a refinery or chemical plant explosion, the law you need to know is 29 CFR 1910.119, the Process Safety Management (PSM) standard. This regulation requires facilities handling highly hazardous chemicals to perform regular “Process Hazard Analyses.”
In the BP Texas City case (of which Ralph was a part), the investigation found that BP had ignored its own internal safety audits for years to cut costs. The explosion wasn’t a “fluke”—it was an inevitability. We bring that same level of industrial hygiene and safety auditing to every accident case in City of Little River-Academy.
High-Voltage Electrocution and Lockout/Tagout Failures
Electrocution is a constant threat for electricians and lineworkers in Bell County. Most industrial electrocutions are caused by a failure of Lockout/Tagout (LOTO) procedures (29 CFR 1910.147). If a machine is energized while you are working on it, or if a site owner allows workers too close to overhead lines near Highway 95, they are liable for the resulting nerve damage, cardiac arrest, or wrongful death.
Lupe Peña’s background as an insurance defense attorney is particularly useful here. He knows how companies try to blame the worker for “not following procedures.” We counter by proving that the employer created an environment where speed was prioritized over safety, making LOTO impossible to follow.
Evidence Preservation for City of Little River-Academy Claims
In any toxic exposure or industrial injury case, evidence is perishable.
- Workplace Records: Companies in Bell County are only required to keep certain OSHA logs for 5 years.
- Product Packaging: It’s vital to identify the specific brand of insulation or solvent from 30 years ago. We interview your former co-workers while their memories are fresh.
- Witness Testimony: In mesothelioma cases, the victim’s own testimony (the “de bene esse” deposition) must be taken immediately to ensure their story is told to the jury.
- Physical Evidence: After a construction accident in City of Little River-Academy, the site changes within hours. We send out private investigators to photograph the scene and secure the defective equipment before it is “repaired” or discarded.
Use your cellphone to document everything you can immediately. As Ralph explains in this evidence documentation guide, a single photo of a brand name or an unshored trench wall can be the difference between a denied claim and a multi-million-dollar verdict.
Medical Resources for City of Little River-Academy Residents
If you are dealing with a toxic exposure diagnosis, you need the best medical care Texas has to offer. The medical documentation generated during your treatment is the cornerstone of your legal case.
- Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Temple: As the major regional medical hub for the Temple-Belton-Academy area, Scott & White provides comprehensive oncology and pulmonary services. Ensure your doctors there are aware of your occupational exposure history.
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston): Ranked #1 in the nation, MD Anderson is the world leader in mesothelioma and leukemia treatment. It is approximately 160 miles from City of Little River-Academy, but for families facing these rare cancers, the trip is often lifesaving.
- Olin E. Teague Veterans’ Medical Center (Temple): For the many veterans in City of Little River-Academy, this VA facility provides the initial toxic exposure screenings required under the PACT Act.
Early diagnosis improves your prognosis and strengthens your claim. Tell your physician exactly where you worked and what you touched. If you need assistance finding a specialist who understands the link between your City of Little River-Academy job and your symptoms, call us. We maintain a network of independent medical experts who specialize in occupational disease.
Why Choose Attorney 911 for Your City of Little River-Academy Case?
You have a choice of attorneys. Most “national” mesothelioma firms are just referral mills—they sign you up and hand your case off to someone else. That won’t happen here.
- We Are Local to Central Texas: We know the Bell County courts, the judges, and the industrial landscape.
- Bilingual Representation: Lupe Peña is fluent in English and Spanish. Hablamos Español. Your immigration status does not affect your legal rights, as Ralph and Magali Candler discuss in our immigration rights series.
- No Fee Unless We Win: We work on a 100% contingency basis. We advance all costs—the expert witness fees, the medical record fees, the filing costs. If we don’t get you a check, you owe us nothing.
- Direct Access: When you call 1-888-ATTY-911, you aren’t talking to a call center. You are talking to a firm where the lead attorney personally responds to his clients.
As Chad H. shared in his verified Google review: “A true PITT BULL and fighter. He didn’t play! Unlike some law firms where you are dealing with an answering service or never even hear back from them, that’s NOT the case with this law firm. Ralph and I had DIRECT COMMUNICATION on my legal issue.”
Another client, Chelsea M., praised our associate: “Special thank you to my attorney, Mr. Pena, for your kindness and patience with my repeated questions and concerns throughout the entire process until the end. I appreciate everything you did to resolve my case.”
FAQ: Toxic Exposure and Injury Law in City of Little River-Academy
Can I file a mesothelioma claim in City of Little River-Academy if my exposure was decades ago?
Yes. Texas follows the “discovery rule.” The statute of limitations for mesothelioma does not begin when you were exposed in the 1970s or 80s; it starts when you were diagnosed and knew (or should have known) that your illness was caused by asbestos. Because mesothelioma has a 20-50 year latency period, most claims are filed decades after the initial exposure. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 to check your specific filing deadline.
Will filing a lawsuit affect my VA benefits?
No. Legal claims against private corporations (like asbestos manufacturers) are entirely separate from your VA disability benefits. You are entitled to pursue both simultaneously. In fact, the medical evidence we gather for your lawsuit often helps secure a higher VA disability rating.
What if the company that exposed me in City of Little River-Academy is out of business?
Many historic asbestos and chemical companies are now bankrupt, but they were required by the courts to set up bankruptcy trust funds to pay future victims. Even if the plant where you worked is gone, the insurance policies and trust funds remain. We identify the successor corporations and the specific trusts you are eligible for.
How much is my toxic exposure case worth?
Every case is unique. Factors include the severity of your diagnosis, your age, your remaining earning capacity, and the number of identifiable defendants. Mesothelioma settlements can range from $1 million to over $10 million, while benzene/AML cases also yield high six- and seven-figure results. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes, but we fight for the maximum possible compensation in every case.
Does it matter if I smoked?
Tobacco use does not cause mesothelioma. It is caused by asbestos. In lung cancer cases, smoking can be used as a defense, but the “synergistic effect”—where asbestos and tobacco combined increase your risk by 50x—actually proves that the asbestos was a substantial contributing factor to your disease.
Act Now to Protect Your City of Little River-Academy Family
The clock is ticking on your rights. Not just the legal clock of the statute of limitations, but the factual clock of evidence preservation and trust fund depletion. The corporations that poisoned workers across City of Little River-Academy are counting on you to wait until it’s too late.
You aren’t just a number to us. You are a family in our community that has been wronged. Let Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña use their combined 35+ years of experience and insider knowledge to fight for your future.
Contact Attorney 911 today.
Call: 1-888-ATTY-911 or (888) 288-9911
Principal Office: Houston, Texas. Serving City of Little River-Academy, Temple, Belton, and all of Bell County.
This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Detailed Case Types and Legal Frameworks
Silica Exposure and Accelerated Silicosis in Bell County Construction
The “blackland” soil of Bell County and the massive concrete projects along I-35 involve crystalline silica. When workers cut, grind, or drill concrete or engineered stone, they create respirable silica dust. Much like asbestos, these microscopic particles penetrate the alveoli, causing fibrotic scarring.
“Accelerated silicosis” is a new epidemic affecting younger workers (aged 20-40) in the countertop and construction industry. If you were working on commercial projects in Temple or residential developments in City of Little River-Academy and are now struggling to breathe, you may have a third-party claim against the manufacturer of the silica-containing product or the equipment that failed to suppress the dust.
Ethylene Oxide (EtO) and Medical Sterilization
The Temple-Belton MSA is a regional healthcare destination. Many medical supplies are sterilized using Ethylene Oxide (EtO). EtO is an IARC Group 1 carcinogen linked to lymphoma, leukemia, and breast cancer. In 2016, the EPA significantly increased the estimated cancer risk of EtO, leading to a wave of litigation across the country. Facility workers and those living near sterilization plants have recovered millions in settlements when it was proven the facilities were releasing toxic gas into the ambient air.
Formaldehyde and the Manufactured Housing Connection
Manufactured housing and pressed-wood products used in City of Little River-Academy home construction often utilized formaldehyde-based resins. Inhalation of formaldehyde gas is a documented cause of nasopharyngeal cancer and myeloid leukemia. If you worked in a plant that manufactured wood products or spent years in a facility with heavy off-gassing, the discovery rule may preserve your right to file a product liability lawsuit today.
Lead Poisoning in Older Bell County Homes
Homes built before 1978 in the older sections of Little River or Academy often contain lead-based paint. While the paint itself is dangerous, the primary risk occurs during renovation when lead dust is aerosolized. Children exposed to lead face permanent neurological damage and IQ reduction. Landlords and renovation contractors who fail to follow EPA’s “RRP” (Renovation, Repair and Painting) rules are strictly liable for the resulting injuries to City of Little River-Academy children.
The Counter-Intelligence Advantage: Lupe Peña’s Strategy
When you go to trial or mediation, you aren’t just fighting a corporation; you’re fighting an insurance carrier’s algorithm. For years, Lupe Peña worked for the firms that defend these carriers. He knows exactly how they attempt to “devalue” a City of Little River-Academy claim:
- The “Alternative Cause” Tactic: They will comb through your military and medical records looking for any other chemical or lifestyle factor to blame.
- The “No Product ID” Defense: They will argue that since you can’t find a 40-year-old receipt for a box of gaskets, you can’t prove their product was at the site. We counter this by locating other workers who were at the same site and can testify to the brands used.
- The “Medical Monitoring” Lowball: In community exposure cases (like PFAS), they will offer to pay for “testing” but fight paying for actual damages. We demand full compensation for the increased risk and emotional distress of being poisoned.
By choosing Attorney 911, you get a firm that speaks the defense’s language. We don’t just ask for a settlement; we present a case that is so scientifically and legally sound that the defense realizes trial would be a disaster for them.
As Ralph explains in this video on “What Is a Million-Dollar Case?”, the value of your case depends on the quality of the advocate who stands before the insurance carrier. In City of Little River-Academy, that advocate is our team.
A Legacy of Accountability for City of Little River-Academy
We believe that no corporation is too big to be held responsible. Whether it’s a multi-national oil company, a global chemical manufacturer like Monsanto, or a Class I railroad, they all must follow the same safety laws. When they break those laws in Bell County, we are here to make them pay.
If you have been diagnosed with a terminal illness, you don’t have time for a lawyer who is “learning the ropes.” You need the firm that has been in the trenches of the toughest refinery and chemical cases in Texas history. You need Attorney 911.
One call. Thousands of questions answered. Your journey from victim to advocate starts here.
Call Attorney 911 – 1-888-ATTY-911.
We answer 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Hablamos Español.
No fee unless we win.
Authoritative Scientific and Regulatory References
For City of Little River-Academy residents who want to research the facts themselves, we recommend the following primary sources:
- OSHA Asbestos Standard (29 CFR 1910.1001): https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.1001
- ATSDR Toxicological Profile for Benzene: https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp3.pdf
- National Cancer Institute (NCI) Mesothelioma Overview: https://www.cancer.gov/types/mesothelioma
- EPA PFAS Strategic Roadmap: https://www.epa.gov/pfas/pfas-strategic-roadmap-epas-commitments-action-2021-2024
- IARC Monograph on Glyphosate (Roundup): https://monographs.iarc.who.int/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/mono112-10.pdf
The science is settled. The laws are on your side. We ensure the corporations are finally held to account. Call 1-888-ATTY-911.