The Sound of the Texas Eagle and the Silence of a Diagnosis: Holding Corporations Accountable for Toxic Exposure in Mineola
For a hundred years, the soul of Mineola has been found along the iron rails of the Texas and Pacific Railway. To most, the train horn echoing near US-80 and Pacific Street is just the sound of Northeast Texas commerce or the arrival of the Texas Eagle. But for the men and women who built their lives in the Union Pacific railyards, on the maintenance-of-way crews, or inside the historic buildings that line the downtown district of Wood County, those sounds carry a heavier weight. You spent decades doing the hard work that kept the “Gateway to East Texas” open for business. You handled the brake shoes, you stripped the pipe lagging in older infrastructure, and you inhaled the diesel fumes and the chemicals without a single warning from the companies that profited from your labor.
Now, that same work is following you home. The persistent cough that doesn’t go away after a shift, the shortness of breath while walking through the Mineola Nature Preserve, or the devastating diagnosis of mesothelioma or leukemia has changed everything. At Attorney 911, we know that what you are facing is not an “accident” or a “stroke of bad luck.” It is the biological consequence of corporate decisions that prioritized quarterly profits over the cellular health of Mineola families.
We are not a billboard law firm that signs cases and disappears into a call center. Ralph Manginello has spent over 27 years in the trenches of litigation, including high-stakes work in the $2.1 billion BP Texas City Refinery explosion cases. We understand the industrial DNA of Texas and specifically how the labor history of Wood County has left a legacy of latent disease. With Lupe Peña on our team—a former insurance defense attorney who knows exactly how corporate lawyers in Tyler and Dallas try to suppress these claims—we provide the aggressive, insider advantage you need to take on the world’s largest corporations.
If you worked for the railroad, in construction along US-69, at a regional utility provider like Wood County Electric Co-op, or in the agricultural sectors of Northeast Texas, you may have been poisoned by substances you couldn’t see and weren’t told were there. You have rights that existed long before your diagnosis. We are here to help you recognize them, prove them, and fight for the compensation your family deserves.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911. Your consultation is free, and we take our commitment to Mineola workers personally.
The Science of Betrayal: How Toxic Substances Attack the Mineola Workforce
You were told your safety was a priority, but the biology of your diagnosis tells a different story. In Mineola and across Wood County, toxic exposure typically doesn’t happen in a single sudden event; it is a slow, cumulative assault on your DNA. To hold a company like Union Pacific, Monsanto, or 3M accountable, we must first understand the clinical mechanism of how they injured you. At Attorney 911, we lead with the science because the science is what corporate defense teams fear the most.
The Anchor of East Texas Industrial Disease: Mesothelioma and the Macrophage Failure
Asbestos is not just “dangerous dust.” It is a naturally occurring silicate mineral that was used in over 3,000 products found throughout Mineola’s historic rail depots, older homes, and industrial sites. When you cut, sanded, or disturbed asbestos insulation or brake lining, you released microscopic fibers into the air. These fibers—specifically the needle-like amphibole fibers—measure five micrometers or longer. When inhaled, they don’t stop in your throat; they penetrate deep into the alveolar region of your lungs and migrate to the pleural lining, the thin tissue surrounding your organs known as the mesothelium.
This is where the betrayal becomes cellular. Your body’s immune system recognizes these fibers as foreign and sends macrophages to engulf and destroy them. However, asbestos fibers are chemically nearly indestructible and physically too long for a single cell to consume. This leads to what scientists call “frustrated phagocytosis.” The macrophages die trying to destroy the fiber, releasing inflammatory cytokines like TNF-α and IL-6. For 20 to 50 years, this cycle of chronic inflammation generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) that relentlessly attack your DNA. Eventually, this oxidative stress inactivates critical tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and p16, allowing a single mesothelial cell to undergo malignant transformation into mesothelioma.
Because of this long latency period, many retirees in Mineola are only now learning that the “dusty” jobs they held in the 1970s and 80s are responsible for their current illness. Under the Texas discovery rule, your time to file a claim begins when you discover the illness and its cause, not when you were first exposed. https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/substances/asbestos/asbestos-fact-sheet
Benzene and the Molecular Rewriting of Your Blood
For those who worked in the railyards near Pacific Street or traveled to the refineries in the nearby Golden Triangle or Tyler area, benzene exposure was a daily reality. Benzene is a fundamental chemical in the petrochemical industry, but in the human body, it acts as a molecular saboteur. When you inhale benzene vapor, 50% of it is absorbed directly through your alveolar membrane into your bloodstream.
In your liver, an enzyme called CYP2E1 metabolizes benzene into benzene oxide, which then converts into muconaldehyde and hydroquinone. These metabolites travel to your bone marrow—the factory where your blood is made. Once there, they bind to the DNA of your hematopoietic stem cells, causing specific chromosomal translocations like t(8;21) or inv(16). These are the genetic hallmarks of Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) and Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS).
If you were a Mineola worker handling solvents, fuels, or industrial cleaners and now suffer from unexplained fatigue, bruising, or a leukemia diagnosis, your blood has a memory of that exposure. Ralph Manginello’s experience in the BP Texas City litigation taught our firm how to track these chemical fingerprints back to the source of the negligence. https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp3.pdf
PFAS: The “Forever Chemical” Legacy in Northeast Texas
We are increasingly identifying communities where drinking water or firefighting foams have introduced Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) into the local environment. PFAS are called “forever chemicals” because of the carbon-fluorine bond—one of the strongest in organic chemistry. Your body has no mechanism to break them down. Instead, they bioaccumulate in your serum, binding to albumin and slowly attacking your liver and kidneys.
In Mineola, residents or firefighters who handled Aqueous Film-Forming Foam (AFFF) during training or emergency response may face an elevated risk of kidney cancer and testicular cancer. PFAS specifically disrupts your nuclear receptors, particularly PPAR-α, leading to metabolic dysfunction and immune system suppression.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free evaluation if you believe your diagnosis is tied to local environmental contamination or occupational chemical handling.
Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña: The Attorney 911 Advantage for Mineola Families
When you take on a multi-billion-dollar corporation, they don’t just bring lawyers; they bring an entire infrastructure of suppression. They hire specialized medical experts, fund their own “studies,” and use their massive resources to try and convince a Wood County jury that your illness was caused by anything other than their products. To win, you need more than a lawyer. You need a team that has already beaten them.
Experience That Was Forged in Fire: The BP Texas City Legacy
Ralph Manginello isn’t just an attorney with 27+ years of experience; he is a veteran of the most complex industrial litigation in Texas history. When the BP Texas City Refinery exploded in 2005, killing 15 and injuring hundreds, Ralph was there. He saw firsthand how a major corporation tried to hide its Process Safety Management (PSM) failures behind a wall of “unforeseeable events.” He learned how to peel back that wall to expose the cost-cutting and ignored safety warnings that truly caused the disaster.
This experience is directly relevant to every Mineola worker. Whether your case involves an industrial explosion, chronic asbestos inhalation, or chemical leukemia, Ralph brings the same federal-court-tested tenacity to your case. He is admitted to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, and he treats every Wood County client with the directness and respect that East Texas values.
The Spy Who Came in From the Cold: Lupe Peña’s Insider Knowledge
Every law firm says they fight insurance companies, but we are one of the few that has an insider in our ranks. Our associate attorney, Lupe Peña, spent years working on the defense side for a national firm. He sat in the conference rooms where corporate insurers decided which claims to pay and which ones to “starve out” through legal delays and medical-record raids.
Lupe knows the playbook they use in Tyler and Dallas courthouses. He knows how they try to exploit the “pre-existing condition” defense and how they attempt to trick workers into signing away their rights in exchange for small workers’ comp checks. Today, Lupe uses that classified intelligence to protect Mineola families. As one of our clients,Greg G., shared in his Google review, “In the beginning I had another attorney but he dropped my case… although Manginello law firm were able to help me out… Big thank you for this law firm staff and Lupe Pena for taking good care of me.”
We provide the “small firm” personal attention where you can talk directly to your attorney, backed by the “big firm” resources and experience needed to secure million-dollar results. As Chad Harris noted in his 5-star review, “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. Atty. Manginello and I had DIRECT COMMUNICATION… You are NOT a pest to them… You are FAMILY.”
The Railroad Legacy of Mineola: FELA Rights and Asbestos Peril
There is no Mineola without the railroad. For generations, working for the “T&P” or later Union Pacific meant a ticket to the middle class. But for many, that ticket came with a hidden cost. Railroad workers—conductors, engineers, shop workers, and gandy dancers—were exposed to more toxins than almost any other sector of the American workforce.
Why FELA Is More Powerful Than Workers’ Comp
If you were injured or made sick by your work on the railroad, you are not covered by the same workers’ compensation rules that apply to a grocery store worker. You are protected by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA), enacted in 1908. FELA (45 U.S.C. § 51) is a specialized law that gives you much broader rights than ordinary workers’ comp.
Under FELA, you can sue your employer for negligence, and your case goes before a jury. Most importantly, FELA uses a “relaxed” causation standard. You do not have to prove the railroad was the 100% cause of your illness; you only have to show that their negligence played “any part, even the slightest” in your injury. This “featherweight” burden of proof was designed specifically because the government recognized that railroad work is uniquely dangerous.
The Asbestos and Diesel Exhaust Connection on the Mineola Lines
For decades, the locomotives that rolled through the Wood County railyards were saturated with asbestos. It was in the engine room lagging, the steam pipe insulation, and most dangerously, the brake shoes. Every time brakes were applied or maintenance was performed, clouds of chrysotile and amosite dust were released into the cabs and the shops.
Furthermore, railroad workers were subjected to constant, high-dose diesel exhaust. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies diesel exhaust as a Group 1 known human carcinogen. https://monographs.iarc.who.int/list-of-classifications. When combined with asbestos, diesel exhaust creates a synergistic effect that multiplies your risk of lung cancer and bladder cancer.
We represent Mineola rail workers against Class I railroads like Union Pacific and BNSF. These companies knew as early as the 1930s that asbestos was lethal (documented in the Sumner Simpson letters) and knew by the 1950s that diesel exhaust was dangerous, yet they continued to prioritize turnaround times over respiratory protection. Attorney Ralph Manginello explains the principles of these large-scale negligence claims on our podcast: https://share.transistor.fm/s/1f8970c7
Call (888) 288-9911 if you worked for the railroad and have been diagnosed with cancer or respiratory disease. The railroads have their own medical departments and legal teams—it’s time you had yours.
Agricultural Betrayal: Wood County Farming and Roundup Exposure
Mineola sits at the heart of a productive agricultural region. In the fields of Wood County, herbicides like Roundup have been used for fifty years as a “safe” tool for weed control. However, internal documents known as the “Monsanto Papers” have revealed that the company knew their active ingredient, glyphosate, was a probable genotoxicant that could cause DNA strand breaks and oxidative stress.
Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma and the Monsanto Cover-Up
In 2015, the World Health Organization’s IARC classified glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic to humans” (Group 2A). For farmers and workers in Northeast Texas who applied Roundup more than 2-4 days per year over a career, the risk of developing Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) increased by as much as 41%.
Monsanto’s own toxicologist wrote in an internal email that the company hadn’t done the necessary testing to claim Roundup was safe. Despite this, they ghostwrote studies and attacked the scientists who spoke out. If you are a resident of Mineola, Quitman, or Hawkins who has been diagnosed with Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma, Follicular Lymphoma, or Mantle Cell Lymphoma after using Roundup, you are a victim of corporate fraud.
Juries are now awarding billions against Monsanto (now Bayer) because the evidence of their betrayal is undeniable. In 2024, a Philadelphia jury awarded $2.25 billion to a single plaintiff with Roundup-related NHL. While every case is different, the settlements reaching six and seven figures for farmers and landscapers are very real. Ralph Manginello explains how case values are determined in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ApiyjLLG1M8
Construction and Infrastructure: The “Fatal Four” in our Community
The growth along the US-80 and US-69 corridors doesn’t happen without the construction trades. But Northeast Texas construction sites too often bypass OSHA standards to speed up deadlines. Electrocution, falls from scaffolding, and trench collapses remain the leading causes of worker death in our region.
Third-Party Liability: Moving Beyond Workers’ Comp
Many Mineola construction workers are told that workers’ comp is their “sole remedy.” In many cases, this is a lie. While you generally cannot sue your direct employer if they have workers’ comp, you CAN sue third parties who contributed to your injury. This includes:
- The General Contractor: For failing to enforce site-wide safety.
- The Property Owner: For dangerous premises conditions.
- Equipment Manufacturers: For defective scaffolds, harnesses, or cranes.
These third-party claims are essential because they have no damage caps and allow you to recover for pain, suffering, and the full loss of your future earning capacity—things workers’ comp rarely covers.
Trench Collapse and Scaffold Falls along US-80
One cubic yard of Wood County soil weighs as much as a small car. If a contractor opens a trench deeper than 5 feet without shoring or a trench box (as required by 29 CFR 1926 Subpart P), it isn’t an accident when it collapses—it’s a crime of negligence. Similarly, OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart L requires specific platform construction and access for scaffolding. If you fell because a scaffold was improperly built, you have a right to full compensation.
As Stephanie Hernandez wrote about her experience with our firm, “She and her team were beyond amazing!!! She took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders… I was trying to reach out to so many firms with no luck and when I received a call from Leonor she immediately reassured me… and she just really made me feel like I mattered.”
Corporate Defense Exposed: The Tactics Used Against Mineola Claimants
Lupe Peña’s background on the defense side is the cornerstone of our “insider” advantage. When you file a claim, the corporation will likely deploy one of these four tactics to stop you. We know how to counter them:
- The “Empty Chair” Defense: They will say you were exposed to 50 khác substances and they shouldn’t have to pay because we can’t prove their specific product was the one that killed you.
- The Counter: We use the “substantial factor” test. Under Texas law, we don’t have to prove their fiber was the only one—only that it was a substantial factor in the cumulative dose that caused your disease.
- The “Statute of Limitations” Trap: They will say you were exposed 30 years ago, so you are too late.
- The Counter: We deploy the Discovery Rule. We prove that the clock didn’t start until you received your medical diagnosis, preserving your right to sue decades after you left the job.
- The Junk Science Expert: They will hire a doctor to say your leukemia was “genetics” or “aging” rather than benzene.
- The Counter: We work with board-certified toxicologists and oncologists who cite your specific chromosomal damage and link it directly to the Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) numbers of the products you used.
- The Bankruptcy Trust Diversion: Some firms will tell you only to file for bankruptcy trust money.
- The Counter: We file for trust money AND we sue the solvent, non-bankrupt defendants. Trust funds often pay only 5-20% of a claim’s value; we won’t leave the other 80-95% on the table.
Watch Ralph’s guide on what not to say to insurance representatives who are looking for ways to ruin your case: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UKRbFprB0E
Navigating Your Medical Journey: Resources for Northeast Texas
A diagnosis of mesothelioma, leukemia, or advanced pulmonary disease is a medical emergency that requires world-class care. Mineola is part of a region with excellent health infrastructure, but specialty toxic exposure treatment often requires travel to major academic centers.
Top Treatment Centers for Mineola Patients
If you have been diagnosed, your first step should be a consultation with a specialist who understands occupational disease:
- UT Health East Texas (Tyler/Mineola): For initial diagnostics and pulmonary evaluations. Their Tyler campus has deep historical expertise in East Texas lung conditions.
- UT Southwestern Medical Center (Dallas): Home to the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center, an NCI-designated center located roughly 85 miles west of Mineola. They offer cutting-edge clinical trials for Mesothelioma and AML. https://utsouthwestern.edu
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston): Ranked #1 in the nation. Many of our Mineola clients travel here for the world’s leading mesothelioma and leukemia programs. Even if you choose to get treatment locally, we recommend getting a “second opinion” or a staging evaluation from MD Anderson thoracic surgical oncologists. https://www.mdanderson.org
- The Veteran Advantage: If you are a veteran in Wood County, you are entitled to a free Toxic Exposure Screening under the PACT Act at the Dallas VA Medical Center or the Canton VA Clinic. This documentation is critical for both your health and your legal claim.
“Health and justice are two sides of the same coin,” Ralph Manginello often tells his clients. Your medical records from these institutions provide the objective “proof” our legal team needs to prove damages to a jury. Leonor Lopez, our firm’s health liaison, discusses the first medical steps to take after you discover an injury in this episode: https://share.transistor.fm/s/caa0bbc0
Frequently Asked Questions for Mineola Toxic Tort Claimants
Can I still sue if my employer in Mineola has gone out of business?
Yes. Many companies that operated in Northeast Texas, such as Johns-Manville or Owens Corning, filed for bankruptcy decades ago. However, as part of that process, they were required to set aside billions of dollars into Asbestos Bankruptcy Trusts. These trusts currently hold over $30 billion. Even if the building you worked in is gone, the money to compensate you is still there. We handle the complex filing process for 60+ of these trusts.
I worked for Wood County Electric Co-op or a local utility—was I at risk?
Electricians and utility workers were frequently exposed to asbestos inside transformers, arc chutes, and cable wrapping. Furthermore, if you handled treated utility poles, you may have been exposed to creosote or pentachlorophenol. If you were an apprentice or journeyman who handled these items without a respirator, call us at 888-ATTY-911 for an exposure assessment.
Does a mesothelioma claim take years to settle?
In Texas, we can file for Trial Preference or an expedited docket for terminal patients. Most mesothelioma cases are settled within 12 to 18 months, but for patients with a poor prognosis, we move aggressively to take your deposition and preserve your testimony within the first 60 days. We know that for your family, time is more than money—it is the only thing that matters.
Will I have to pay anything upfront to hire Attorney 911?
No. We work on a Contingency Fee basis. We advance all the massive costs of litigation—hiring world-class toxicologists, obtaining decades of railroad employment records, and covering court fees. If we do not win compensation for you, you owe us absolutely nothing. Our 4.9-star Google rating and perfect Avvo scores reflect our dedication to this “success-only” model.
My doctor didn’t say my cancer was from work—does that mean I don’t have a case?
Most general practitioners in East Texas are trained to treat your symptoms, not to investigate your industrial work history from 1978. The fact that a doctor didn’t “diagnose” the exposure doesn’t mean it didn’t happen. That is where we come in. We reconstruct your work history and use our experts to provide the causal link that your primary care physician might have missed.
Your Statute of Limitations: The Discovery Clock is Ticking in Wood County
Toxic exposure law is governed by strict deadlines. In Texas, you generally have two years from the date you knew—or should have known—that your injury was caused by exposure to file a lawsuit. This sounds like a long time, but evidence in Mineola is disappearing every day.
Witnesses move away, old railroad shops are renovated, and corporate records are shredded after 7 to 10 years of “routine” data management. If you wait, you are handing a victory to the defense on a silver platter. We move within the first 14 days of being hired to send formal Spoliation Preservation Demands to your former employers. These legal documents force them to stop shredding and start preserving the OSHA logs and industrial hygiene reports we need to win.
As Ralph Manginello explains in his guide on million-dollar cases, “Success depends on the evidence you save today, not the arguments you make in court tomorrow.” https://share.transistor.fm/s/d690a218
The Multi-Pathway Strategy: Why Attorney 911 Recovers More
Unlike firms that only do “asbestos” or only do “workers’ comp,” we look at your life through a wide-angle lens. A single Mineola worker might qualify for:
- FELA Negligence Claims against the railroad.
- Bankruptcy Trust Payments from multiple manufacturers.
- VA Disability Benefits through the PACT Act and service connection.
- Third-Party Product Liability Claims against solvent chemical manufacturers.
- Wrongful Death and Survival Actions to protect your family’s future income.
We pursue all these tables simultaneously. One call to 1-888-ATTY-911 launches an investigation into every possible source of recovery.
Join the 270+ Clients Who Trusted Attorney 911 for Their Legal Emergencies
You have spent your whole life being a provider for your family in Mineola. You did the hard, dangerous work that built Wood County. Now, when you need a provider yourself, we are ready to stand in the gap. We treat our clients like family because we are a family-run Texas firm. Ralph’s son RJ and his wife Kelly are his inspiration, and he brings that same level of protection to yours.
Don’t let the corporations that poisoned you have the last word. From the Union Pacific yards to the fields of Northeast Texas, we have the experience, the science, and the insider defense advantage to hold them accountable.
Free Consultation. 24/7 Availability. Hablamos Español.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911.
Mineola Office / Wood County Outreach: We Travel to You.
Principal Office: 1177 W. Loop South, Suite 1600, Houston, TX 77027.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique. This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute medical or legal advice.
Deep Tissue Architecture of Mineola’s Industrial Past and Future
Understanding the specific industrial landmarks of Mineola is the only way to build a case that moves a local jury. When we talk about your exposure, we are talking about real places in the US-80 and US-69 corridor.
The Rail Hub Realities
The North Pacific Street area and the intersection of the UP and Amtrak lines have processed millions of tons of chemicals, fuels, and industrial freight. For the switchmen and conductors working these segments, the exposure wasn’t just “in the air”—it was in the ground. Creosote-soaked ties and spilled solvents leach into the soil, creating “hot zones” where workers spent eight to twelve hours a day. The fine white dust that used to coat the railyards through the mid-80s was often pure asbestos fluff from thermal insulation removal. We know these sites, and we know how to pull the EPA TRI (Toxics Release Inventory) data for our Wood County ZIP codes.
The Construction Boom and the Demolition Risk
As Mineola’s historic downtown undergoes revitalization, workers are being sent into buildings built in the 1920s through the 1960s. These structures are “asbestos traps.” Every time a contractor removes a floor tile, opens a wall for electrical work, or scrapes old popcorn ceiling texture, they are releasing billions of fibers. If you were a local sub-contractor sent into a job site without an asbestos survey (required by 40 CFR 61 Subpart M), you were set up to fail. We hold those general contractors and property owners responsible for every breath you took in that dust.
The Wood County Utility and Municipal Workforce
Workers at the Mineola water treatment plants or the regional electricity cooperatives face high-voltage electrocution risks and exposure to water-treatment chemicals like chlorine and formaldehyde. Our firm has deep experience in these Axis 2 industrial injuries. If a lockout/tagout procedure was ignored or a confined space entry permit was skipped, the employer has violated federal safety standards (29 CFR 1910.146).
Ralph Manginello’s podcast episode on the “Million Dollar Case” explains how we evaluate these high-intensity utility injuries: https://share.transistor.fm/s/d690a218
The Final Word: Accountability for Mineola
The sirens you hear in Mineola shouldn’t just signal a crisis; they should signal a response. At Attorney 911, we are that response. We have the $2.1 billion BP explosion litigation pedigree, the insurance defense insider strategy, and the Northeast Texas heart needed to win your fight.
If you are coughing, if you are tired, and if you are scared—reach out. You are not a statistic. You are a worker, a neighbor, and a family member who was failed by the system. Let us help you make it right.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 Today.
Attorney 911 | The Manginello Law Firm
Because when it’s your life on the line, you need the aggressive advocacy of a firm that knows how to win.
Summary of Authoritative Resources for Mineola Citizens:
- The Mesothelioma Center (Asbestos Support): 1-800-336-0086
- Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS): https://www.lls.org
- UT Southwestern Simmons Cancer Center (Dallas): 214-645-8300
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston): 1-877-632-6789
- OSHA Whistleblower Protection Line: 1-800-321-OSHA
- Texas Department of Insurance (Workers’ Comp Info): https://www.tdi.texas.gov/wc
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique. Contact us for a free consultation about your specific situation.
Conclusion: Turning Betrayal into Justice
You spent your years working for a better future for Mineola. Now that your future is under attack by the latent diseases of toxic exposure, don’t face the corporate machine alone. From the railroad tracks to the construction sites, from the agricultural fields to the utility lines—we are your legal emergency responders.
Attorney 911. 1-888-ATTY-911.
We Answer. We Investigate. We Win.