If You Worked the Lines at Red River Army Depot or Lone Star Army Ammunition Plant, Everything You Thought Was “Part of the Job” May Have Been a Betrayal
You didn’t know. For twenty years, thirty years, or even longer, you drove from the City of Redwater out toward the gates of the Red River Army Depot (RRAD) or the Lone Star Army Ammunition Plant (LSAAP). You did your job. You maintained the Bradley Fighting Vehicles, you handled the munitions, you stripped the old gaskets, and you cleaned the heavy machinery with solvents that smelled like citrus and death. You came home to City of Redwater, hugged your children, and washed the white dust and oil off your skin, never realizing that the very work providing for your family was quietly destroying your health. Nobody told you the dust you breathed while sandblasting equipment or the chemicals you handled in the production bays would one day attempt to take your life. Now you know. And now you have rights that have been suppressed for decades.
The cough likely started as something minor—a nagging dry irritation you attributed to the humidity in Northeast Texas or a lingering seasonal cold. But it didn’t go away. Then came the shortness of breath that made walking from your car to your front door in City of Redwater feel like a marathon. Then the doctor said a word you had only ever heard on late-night television: mesothelioma. Or perhaps it was acute myeloid leukemia. Or perhaps a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease after years of pesticide use in the piney woods. Suddenly, every memory of your years at those Bowie County facilities changed forever.
What happened to you was not a stroke of bad luck. It was not simply a consequence of aging. It was exposure—prolonged, documented, and often knowingly permitted exposure to some of the most lethal substances on earth. The companies that manufactured the asbestos-containing materials you handled and the contractors who managed the sites in and around City of Redwater had the data. They had the studies. They knew that chrysotile and amosite fibers were “biopersistent” killers. They knew that benzene-based solvents were rewriting the DNA of their workers’ bone marrow. They knew, and they chose silence because silence was more profitable than safety.
At Attorney 911, we believe there is a word for what happened to you and your family: accountability. We represent workers and families in City of Redwater and across Bowie County who have been betrayed by the very industries they built. Our firm is led by Ralph Manginello, who has spent over 27 years holding billion-dollar corporations accountable for destroying the health of the American workforce. We aren’t a “settlement mill” that signs thousands of cases to never return a phone call. We are a senior litigation team that includes Lupe Peña, a former insurance defense attorney who spent years on the other side of the table. He knows exactly how these companies try to hide their records and minimize your suffering—because he saw their playbook from the inside.
This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Contact us for a free consultation about your specific situation. Our principal office is located in Houston, Texas, and we serve clients throughout City of Redwater, the Northeast Texas corridor, and across the United States. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for the aggressive legal response your situation demands.
How Your Body Was Betrayed: The Medical Science of Toxic Exposure
To understand why you are sick, you must understand what these substances do at a cellular level. Corporate defense attorneys in cases near City of Redwater often try to argue that “minimal exposure” couldn’t have caused your disease. They are lying. The medical science is clear: for substances like asbestos and benzene, there is no established safe level of exposure.
The Mechanism of Mesothelioma: Frustrated Phagocytosis
Asbestos isn’t a chemical; it’s a mineral that fragments into microscopic, needle-like fibers. When you worked at a site like the Red River Army Depot, particularly in vehicle maintenance or facility insulation, you inhaled these fibers. Because they are smaller than five micrometers, they bypass your upper respiratory defenses and travel deep into the alveoli of your lungs. From there, they migrate to the pleural lining—the mesothelium.
Once there, your body’s immune system attempts to protect you. Specialized cells called macrophages identify the asbestos fibers as foreign invaders and attempt to engulf them. This process is called phagocytosis. However, asbestos fibers are long, rigid, and bio-persistent. The macrophages cannot break them down and cannot fully surround them. This leads to “frustrated phagocytosis.” As the macrophages fail, they rupture, releasing inflammatory cytokines (like TNF-α and IL-1β) and reactive oxygen species (ROS).
This creates a state of chronic inflammation that lasts for decades. The ROS causes direct oxidative DNA damage to your mesothelial cells. Specifically, it targets tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and NF2. After 15 to 50 years of this continuous cellular war, the damaged cells undergo a malignant transformation. The result is mesothelioma—a cancer that is uniquely pathognomonic for asbestos exposure. Attorney Ralph Manginello explains the gravity of high-value cases like these on the Attorney 911 YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
Benzene and the Molecular Rewriting of Your Blood
If you worked with industrial degreasers, fuels, or solvents in Bowie County, you were likely exposed to benzene. Unlike asbestos, benzene is a chemical that your liver attempts to process. Using the enzyme CYP2E1, your body converts benzene into benzene oxide, which then metabolizes into highly reactive electrophiles like muconaldehyde and p-benzoquinone.
These metabolites travel to your bone marrow. This is where the real damage happens. These compounds bind to the DNA of your hematopoietic stem cells—the master cells responsible for producing all your blood cells. This leads to chromosomal translocations, such as t(8;21), which are essentially “fingerprints” of benzene toxicity. Over time, your bone marrow stops producing healthy blood cells and begins producing immature, malignant blasts. This progression typically moves from myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) to acute myeloid leukemia (AML).
If you are a City of Redwater resident who has been told your leukemia is “just bad luck,” you need to know that your work history at the depots or nearby industrial sites may provide the real answer. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies benzene as a Group 1 known human carcinogen, and companies have known of its link to leukemia since the early 1900s. https://monographs.iarc.who.int/substances-labeled-with-iarc-monographs-group-1/
Why City of Redwater and Bowie County Are at High Risk
The geographic history of the City of Redwater is inseparable from the massive military and industrial complexes that border it. The proximity to the Red River Army Depot and the former Lone Star Army Ammunition Plant means that generations of City of Redwater families have been in the “exposure zone.”
The Red River Army Depot (RRAD) Legacy
For decades, RRAD has been the center for the maintenance and repair of tactical wheeled vehicles and small-arms munitions. This work involved the extensive use of asbestos gaskets, brake linings, and thermal insulation. Workers who lived in City of Redwater and commuted to RRAD were often assigned to “hot work”—cutting, grinding, and stripping these materials without adequate respiratory protection.
When you grind an asbestos gasket, you aren’t just creating a mess; you are creating a “dust cloud” containing millions of respirable fibers. In the enclosed bays of a maintenance facility, those fibers stay suspended in the air for hours. Even the administrative staff at these facilities were at risk, as the heating and cooling systems were often insulated with amosite asbestos that degraded and circulated through the vents.
Lone Star Army Ammunition Plant (LSAAP)
The history of LSAAP is one of munitions production that utilized a vast array of toxic chemicals. From the solvents used for cleaning shell casings to the chemicals used in explosives formulation, the soil and air around this facility have a documented history of contamination. For City of Redwater residents, the risk wasn’t just at the plant—it was also “take-home” exposure.
Secondary exposure is a devastating reality in Bowie County. If you worked at LSAAP or RRAD, you often came home to City of Redwater with dust and chemicals on your coveralls. When your spouse did the laundry, shaking out those clothes before putting them in the wash, they inhaled the same fibers and toxins. We have seen many cases of wives and children of depot workers developing mesothelioma despite never having stepped foot on the base. This is a betrayal that spans generations.
If your family has been impacted by these facilities, call 1-888-ATTY-911. We know the history of these Bowie County sites, and we know how to secure the records that prove you were exposed.
The Corporate Enemy: 100 Years of Documented Concealment
The most infuriating part of toxic exposure cases in the City of Redwater is the proof that the companies responsible knew exactly what they were doing. They didn’t just ignore the risks; they actively suppressed the science.
The Sumner Simpson Letters (1935)
In 1935, the president of Raybestos-Manhattan, Sumner Simpson, wrote a letter to the vice president of Johns-Manville, Vandiver Brown. Simpson discussed the emerging medical research showing that their products were killing workers. Brown’s reply was chilling: “I think the less said about asbestos, the better off we are.” Those letters, discovered decades later, proved a conspiracy to hide the truth from the American workforce. The very products Johns-Manville sought to protect through silence were being installed in the facilities where City of Redwater residents worked every day.
The Monsanto Papers and Roundup
In City of Redwater’s agricultural and timber sectors, Roundup (glyphosate) has been a staple for years. However, internal Monsanto documents revealed in recent litigation show that the company ghostwrote scientific studies to claim glyphosate was safe while internally acknowledging the risks of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. They maintained a “Let Nothing Go” program to attack any scientist who questioned their narrative. Today, juries across the country are awarding billions in damages to people who used this product and developed cancer.
3M and the Betrayal of Our Military
3M, a major defense contractor, knew that the PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) in their firefighting foam (AFFF) used at military bases like RRAD were “forever chemicals.” They knew these substances bioaccumulated in human blood and could cause kidney and testicular cancer. They buried these findings for thirty years. If you served in the fire brigade or worked in crash-recovery near City of Redwater, 3M’s silence may be the reason for your current health crisis.
Lupe Peña, our former insurance defense insider, spent year observing how these corporations plan their defenses when these documents come to light. He knows their strategies for explaining away these “smoking guns.” At Attorney 911, we use Lupe’s knowledge to preempt their excuses. We don’t just ask them for documents; we know what they are hiding and where to find it.
Your Rights as a Dangerous Industry Worker in Northeast Texas
If you were injured or diagnosed with a disease in City of Redwater, your employer likely handed you a workers’ compensation form and told you it was your only option. They were likely wrong. In Texas, and across the United States, there are multiple pathways to compensation that go far beyond the limited recovery of workers’ comp.
The Myth of the “Exclusive Remedy”
The “Exclusive Remedy” doctrine is a legal shield that generally prevents employees from suing their direct employer for a workplace injury. However, in toxic exposure and catastrophic injury cases, this shield has massive holes:
- Third-Party Claims: You can sue the manufacturer of the toxic substance, the manufacturer of the defective equipment, and the premises owner if they are not your direct employer. These claims have no damage caps and allow you to recover for pain, suffering, and mental anguish.
- Texas Non-Subscribers: Texas is unique in that it allows employers to opt out of workers’ compensation. If your employer in City of Redwater is a “non-subscriber,” you can sue them directly for negligence, and they lose most of their traditional legal defenses.
- Gross Negligence: In many cases, if an employer’s conduct was grossly negligent, you can pursue punitive damages that bypass workers’ comp limitations.
The Jones Act and Maritime Rights
While City of Redwater is inland, many of our residents work on the waterways of the Gulf Coast or the Red River. Under the Jones Act (46 U.S.C. § 30104), seamen have the right to sue their employer for negligence. This is a much more powerful right than traditional land-based workers’ comp. If you spent 30% or more of your work time on a vessel—whether it was a barge, a tug, or an offshore rig—you qualify for Jones Act protections. Ralph Manginello provides a definitive guide to these rights here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vd_HVPtPf4
FELA: Protection for Redwater Railroad Workers
The City of Redwater has deep ties to the railroad industry, particularly with the legacy of the Texas & Pacific and the ongoing operations of Union Pacific. Railroad workers are NOT covered by workers’ compensation. Instead, they are protected by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA). Under FELA, the burden of proof is much lighter than in a standard negligence case. If the railroad’s negligence played even the slightest part in your injury or your exposure to asbestos in locomotive shops or creosote in the yards, they are liable.
As Ralph explains on the Attorney 911 podcast, these federal statutes are designed to protect the worker, yet many railroads in the Texarkana area count on their employees not knowing these rights. https://share.transistor.fm/s/bddc1426
Mesothelioma: The Anchor of Justice for Bowie County Families
Mesothelioma is a uniquely cruel disease because its latency period is so long. You could have been exposed at a City of Redwater construction site in 1978 and not receive a diagnosis until 2026. This long gap is exactly what the corporations hope will make you give up. They hope you won’t remember the name of the insulation you cut or the manufacturer of the gaskets you replaced.
At Attorney 911, we have access to a massive database of asbestos-containing products used in military and industrial sites across Bowie County. We know that if you worked maintenance at RRAD between 1965 and 1985, you handled Kaylo pipe insulation (Owens-Illinois) and UNIBESTOS block (Pittsburgh Corning). We know exactly which bankruptcy trusts are responsible for those products.
The Asbestos Trust Fund Pathway
There is currently over $30 billion held in more than 60 active asbestos bankruptcy trusts. These trusts were established because the courts realized that companies like Johns-Manville were using bankruptcy to hide from their victims. A trust claim is often faster than a lawsuit and requires a different standard of proof. Most victims in City of Redwater qualify to file with multiple trusts simultaneously.
However, trust fund payment percentages are declining. The Manville Trust, for instance, has reduced its payouts to approximately 5% of the total claim value to ensure funds last for future victims. This means there is no benefit to waiting. Every year you delay your filing is a year the pool of money gets smaller. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today to begin screening your eligibility for these funds.
Axis 1: Toxic Substances — What Is Destroying Your Health?
Beyond asbestos, the City of Redwater and the greater Northeast Texas region have been impacted by a rogue’s gallery of toxic substances.
Benzene and Aromatic Hydrocarbons
Benzene is present in almost every industrial sector of Bowie County. It is a fundamental component of refined petroleum products. If you worked at a tank farm, a refinery, or a fuel transport facility, you were exposed. The OSHA permissible exposure limit (PEL) for benzene is 1 ppm (29 CFR 1910.1028), but this limit was only set after decades of industry pressure kept it at 10 ppm—a level now known to be lethal to bone marrow. https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.1028
PFAS: The “Forever Chemicals”
PFAS contamination is an emerging crisis near military installations. If you live in City of Redwater and your water comes from sources near firefighting training areas, you may have “forever chemicals” in your blood. These chemicals contain the strongest bond in organic chemistry—the carbon-fluorine bond—and they never break down. They cause thyroid disease, kidney cancer, and ulcerative colitis. The EPA has recently set a vanishingly small limit of 4 parts per trillion for these chemicals in drinking water. https://www.epa.gov/pfas
Roundup and Paraquat
In the timber and agricultural lands surrounding City of Redwater, the use of Roundup for brush control and Paraquat for desiccation is common. While Roundup causes non-Hodgkin lymphoma, Paraquat is a selective dopaminergic neurotoxin that causes Parkinson’s disease. Syngenta, the manufacturer of Paraquat, has faced thousands of lawsuits from farmers and applicators who were never warned of this link.
Axis 2: Dangerous Industries — Where Were You Working?
The “Fatal Four” construction killers (falls, struck-by, electrocution, and caught-in/between) are active throughout the City of Redwater development projects.
Construction and Scaffold Falls
Construction is the deadliest industry in America. In City of Redwater, we see incidents involving improper fall protection that violate 29 CFR 1926 Subpart M. If a worker falls from a scaffold, the general contractor and the property owner are often liable for failing to provide a safe site. These third-party claims are critical because they bypass the meager limits of workers’ comp. Attorney Ralph Manginello’s guide to construction accidents is a must-watch for any injured tradesperson: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqYeRjbR9PI
Industrial Explosions and Refinery Accidents
The Northeast Texas corridor is home to major industrial facilities where “process safety management” (29 CFR 1910.119) is often neglected in favor of production quotas. Cases like the BP Texas City Refinery explosion, where 15 workers died, prove that major corporations will push equipment past the point of failure. Ralph Manginello was part of the BP litigation team that secured results in that $2.1 billion case. If you were injured in a plant fire or explosion near City of Redwater, you need that same level of high-stakes experience on your side.
Trench Collapses and Excavation
A cubic yard of Bowie County soil weighs as much as a small car—between 2,700 and 3,000 pounds. When a trench collapses, the pressure across a worker’s chest makes breathing impossible. Survival is measured in minutes. 90% of trench fatalities occur because an employer didn’t spend the money on trench boxes or shoring required by OSHA (29 CFR 1926 Subpart P). This is negligence, pure and simple.
The Insider Advantage: Why Lupe Peña Matters to Your Case
Most law firms in Texas claim to “fight for you.” But how many of them have an attorney who actually sat in the defense boardrooms for the insurance companies? When you hire Attorney 911, you get the benefit of Lupe Peña’s years on the other side.
Lupe spent a significant portion of his career representing the very corporations and insurance carriers we now sue. He knows how they evaluate a mesothelioma claim in City of Redwater. He knows that they use software to “score” your case based on your age, your ZIP code, and the specific facility where you were exposed. He knows the tactics they use to delay your deposition in hopes that you will pass away before you can testify.
Most importantly, Lupe knows where the weaknesses are in their “investigations.” He knows that when they say they “can’t find the records,” the records are often sitting in an archive under a different name. This “spy in the house of defense” is why Attorney 911 is fundamentally different. We don’t guess what the defense will do next; we already know.
Watch Lupe explain the realities of deposition questions and how insurance companies try to trip up victims: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_qCwqfeRRs
Evidence Preservation: Don’t Let Them Shred Your Rights
In toxic exposure cases near City of Redwater, the evidence is disappearing every day.
- Facility Closure: When an old factory or shop in Bowie County closes, the paper records of your employment and safety monitoring are often discarded.
- Witness Mortality: Your co-workers who saw the dust and smelled the chemicals are aging. Statistics show that for workers in the 70+ age cohort, the mortality rate is significant. If they pass away before we can take their affidavit, their testimony is lost.
- Building Demolition: Houses and buildings in City of Redwater that were built with asbestos materials are being renovated or demolished. Once the building is gone, the physical proof of your exposure is gone.
- Retention Policies: Most companies have a 7-year document retention policy. If your exposure was 20 years ago, they have zero legal obligation to keep those files unless a lawyer intervenes.
The moment you call Attorney 911, we initiate a multi-phase preservation protocol. We send spoliation demand letters to your former employers and their insurance carriers. We subpoena OSHA logs and industrial hygiene reports. We use private investigators to locate your former shipmates or plant-floor colleagues. We move faster than the corporations can shred.
As Ralph Manginello explains in this video on evidence, your cellphone can be a powerful tool for documenting your situation now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs
Compensation: What Your Fight Is Actually Worth
We will never promise you a specific dollar amount, because every case is unique. But the data from decades of toxic tort litigation describes the scale of the money that has been intentionally withheld from workers like you.
- Mesothelioma: Combined settlements from trust funds and lawsuits often range from $1 million to over $10 million, with landmark verdicts in cases of egregious concealment reaching $100 million or more.
- Benzene/AML: Verdicts for mechanics and refinery workers have reached as high as $725 million when the exposure history was properly documented.
- FELA Railroad Injuries: Redwater railroaders have secured settlements between $500,000 and $3 million+ depending on the severity of their disability and the railroad’s negligence.
- Jones Act Injuries: Maritime workers with serious back or spinal injuries often see awards in the seven-figure range to cover lifetime care and lost earning capacity.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. The value of your case depends on your diagnosis, your work history, the specific defendants identified, and the quality of your legal team. We work on a contingency fee basis. This means you pay ZERO upfront. We advance all the costs of the case—the expert doctors, the toxicologists, the researchers—and we only get paid if you win. As Ralph explains, studies show that represented victims often recover 3.5 times more than those who try to go it alone. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc
Frequently Asked Questions for City of Redwater Residents
1. I was exposed to asbestos in Bowie County 40 years ago. Is it too late?
In Texas, the “Discovery Rule” protects you. The statute of limitations typically doesn’t start from the date of exposure; it starts when you knew or reasonably should have known that you were sick and that your sickness was caused by exposure. For mesothelioma, which can take 50 years to appear, this means your claim is very likely still valid if you were recently diagnosed.
2. Can I file a claim if the company I worked for is out of business?
Yes. Many companies that operated near City of Redwater went into “bankruptcy-reorganization” to handle their mounting asbestos liabilities. As part of that process, they were forced to create bankruptcy trusts to pay future victims. Even if the factory is gone, the money held in those trusts is still there for you.
3. Will filing a lawsuit affect my VA benefits or Social Security?
Generally, no. Civil lawsuits and trust fund claims are independent of government benefit programs. You can receive VA disability for toxic exposure while simultaneously pursuing a lawsuit against the product manufacturers. In fact, many people use their legal settlements to pay for experimental treatments the government won’t cover.
4. What if I don’t know exactly what chemicals or products I handled?
This is the most common concern we hear. Most people don’t remember the brand names of the insulation they cut 30 years ago. We handle the “reconstruction.” We know the procurement records for the Red River Army Depot. We know the Safety Data Sheets (SDS) for the chemicals used at Northeast Texas industrial sites. You tell us where and when you worked; we identify the toxins.
5. My father died of lung cancer locally. Can the family still sue?
Yes. We handle both “wrongful death” claims (compensation for the family’s loss) and “survival actions” (recovering the damages the deceased person suffered before their death). If your loved one worked in a high-risk industry around City of Redwater, their death may have been preventable.
6. Do I have to travel to Houston for my case?
No. While our principal office is in Houston, we handle cases throughout City of Redwater and Bowie County. We utilize remote consultations, we can visit you in your home or hospital, and Ralph Manginello frequently travels to Northeast Texas to represent the interests of our clients.
7. What is the first step in the legal process?
The first step is a free, no-obligation conversation. We will ask you about your work and medical history to determine if there is a viable pathway to compensation. You have nothing to lose by calling 1-888-ATTY-911 to find out where you stand.
8. My employer told me it was my own fault for not wearing a mask. Is my case ruined?
Companies love this defense. However, under FELA (for railroads) and the Jones Act (for maritime), the employer has a non-delegable duty to provide a safe workplace. Even in standard negligence cases, “comparative negligence” in Texas means that as long as the company was more than 50% responsible, you can still recover. We often find that the “masks” provided were either the wrong type for the toxin or were not provided in sufficient quantities.
9. I am an undocumented worker. Can I still sue for a workplace injury?
Absolutely. Your immigration status has zero impact on your legal right to a safe workplace or your right to seek compensation for injuries and toxic exposure. Federal and state laws protect ALL workers. Lupe Peña is bilingual and can discuss your case in Spanish with full confidentiality. Hablamos Español.
10. How long does a toxic exposure case take?
Trust fund claims can move quite quickly—often within a few months. A standard civil lawsuit can take 12 to 24 months. However, if a client has a terminal diagnosis, we can petition the court for an “expedited trial docket.” In these cases, we can often move toward a resolution in a matter of months to ensure justice is served while the client is still with us.
Medical Resources and Support for Redwater Families
Fighting a disease like mesothelioma or AML requires more than just a legal team; it requires the best medical care in the world. Fortunately, being in City of Redwater puts you within driving distance of some of the top cancer centers on the planet.
- MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston): Consistently ranked as the #1 cancer hospital in the United States. MD Anderson has a dedicated mesothelioma program that led the way in specialized surgical techniques like pleurectomy/decortication. https://www.mdanderson.org
- UT Southwestern / Simmons Cancer Center (Dallas): An NCI-designated comprehensive cancer center with leading-edge programs in lung cancer and hematology. https://utswmed.org/cancer/
- Christus St. Michael Health System (Texarkana): For initial diagnosis and ongoing localized care, St. Michael’s provides high-quality oncology and pulmonary services right in your backyard. https://www.christushealth.org/locations/st-michael
- Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation: This is the gold standard for patient support and clinical trial matching. They connect patients with specialists who handle nothing but this rare disease. https://www.curemeso.org
- Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS): If your diagnosis is benzene-related, the LLS provides critical information specialists and financial support programs for families. https://www.lls.org
Conclusion: The Corporations Won’t Call You with an Apology
The companies that exposed you to asbestos at the Red River Army Depot or benzene at a nearby refinery are not going to call you to apologize. They are not going to volunteer to pay for your medical bills or your family’s future. They have spent millions on defense lawyers and lobbyists to ensure they never have to.
Your fight for accountability starts with one call. When you call 1-888-ATTY-911, you aren’t getting a call center. You are reaching a team with over 27 years of high-stakes litigation experience. You are reaching Ralph Manginello, a trial attorney admitted to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, who has stood toe-to-toe with multinational corporations like BP and won. You are reaching Lupe Peña, the former defense insider who knows how to predict and dismantle corporate tactics.
You spent your career building Bowie County and providing for your family. Now, the companies that profited from your hard work owe you the truth. They owe you justice. And they owe you the resources to fight for your health.
We answer. We investigate. We fight. We hold them accountable.
Call Attorney 911 at 1-888-ATTY-911 or (888) 288-9911 for your free consultation. You have carried the burden of this exposure for long enough. Let us carry the weight of the legal battle for you.
Attorney 911 / The Manginello Law Firm
Principal Office: Houston, Texas
Serving City of Redwater, Bowie County, and victims nationwide.
1-888-ATTY-911
https://attorney911.com
This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Contact a qualified attorney to discuss the specifics of your case and your state’s statutes of limitations.