Mesothelioma and Toxic Exposure Lawyer in City of Uncertain: Fighting for Harrison County Workers and Families
For decades, the people of the City of Uncertain and the surrounding Harrison County communities have lived in the shadow of the massive industrial complex known as the Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant in nearby Karnack. While the Spanish moss drapes the cypress trees of Caddo Lake, a less visible reality has settled into the lungs and bloodstreams of the men and women who worked those lines and maintained those facilities. At Attorney 911, we know that your diagnosis—whether it is mesothelioma, acute myeloid leukemia, or a devastating respiratory failure—is not a random stroke of bad luck. It is the biological consequence of being sent into environments where corporations and government contractors knew the risks and chose to remain silent.
If you worked the manufacturing lines near Karnack, maintained the rail lines heading through Marshall, or built the pipelines now crisscrossing the Haynesville Shale, you were likely exposed to substances that rewrite your DNA. We are Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña, and we have built our firm, Attorney 911, to be the legal emergency response for people who have been poisoned by their own workplaces. With over 27 years of experience and a track record that includes major refinery litigation like the BP Texas City explosion, we provide the aggressive, data-driven advocacy required to beat billion-dollar corporate defense teams.
In a verified Google review, Chad H. described our approach: “A true PITT BULL and fighter. He don’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.” We bring that “pit bull” energy to every toxic exposure case in the City of Uncertain, ensuring that no stone is left unturned in identifying every liable party and every available dollar of compensation.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential consultation. We work on a contingency fee basis, meaning there is no fee unless we win your case. Principal Office: Houston, Texas.
The Insider Advantage: Why Your Choice of Lawyer Matters in City of Uncertain
Toxic exposure litigation is not like a standard personal injury claim. In a car accident, the evidence is on the pavement. In a toxic exposure case, the evidence is often hidden in a corporate filing cabinet from 1974 or buried in the cellular structure of your own lungs. To win, you need a team that understands how the “other side” thinks.
This is where Lupe Peña provides our clients in the City of Uncertain a nuclear advantage. Before joining our firm to fight for injured workers, Lupe worked on the defense side for large insurance companies. He sat in the rooms where they calculated how little they could pay you. He knows the tactics they use to suppress evidence of workplace monitoring and how they attempt to blame your illness on “lifestyle choices” or alternative causes. When we build your case, we aren’t guessing at the defense’s next move; we already have the playbook.
Ralph Manginello brings 27 years of trial experience, including federal court admission to the Southern District of Texas, to your fight. Ralph’s experience in the BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation showed him firsthand how massive corporations prioritize production over human lives. We use that experience to hold the companies that operated in and around Harrison County accountable.
As Jamin M. shared in a Google review: “Mr. Manginello guided me through the whole process with great expertise. He kept me calm and appraised at every step. Not only would I recommend him to anyone but I can say that things may not have turned out for me the way they did had I not had him on my side.”
The corporations that exposed you have a team of lawyers. We believe you deserves a team that is more experienced, more aggressive, and more knowledgeable about the science of your exposure.
Watch how we hold corporations accountable on the Attorney 911 YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
The Anchor Case: Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure in Harrison County
Mesothelioma is an aggressive, terminal cancer caused almost exclusively by exposure to asbestos. For workers in the City of Uncertain, exposure often happened decades ago at sites like the Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant, Southern Pacific rail yards, or during the construction of the large industrial boilers used in regional timber and manufacturing plants.
The Biological Mechanism: How Asbestos Destroys the Mesothelium
Asbestos is a group of naturally occurring minerals that form microscopic, needle-like fibers. When these fibers are inhaled or ingested—often when workers are cutting insulation, replacing gaskets, or removing old ceiling tiles—they penetrate deep into the body. Because of their chemical structure, these fibers are “biopersistent,” meaning your body cannot break them down or expel them.
Once the fibers reach the mesothelium—the thin lining that protects your lungs (pleural), abdomen (peritoneal), or heart (pericardial)—they trigger a process called “frustrated phagocytosis.” Your body’s immune cells, or macrophages, attempt to engulf and destroy the fibers. However, the fibers are too long and sharp. The macrophages die in the attempt, releasing reactive oxygen species (ROS) and inflammatory cytokines like TNF-alpha.
This creates a state of chronic, permanent inflammation that lasts for decades. Over 15 to 50 years, this constant biological assault leads to DNA damage, the inactivation of tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and p16, and eventually, the malignant transformation of mesothelial cells. By the time symptoms appear, the cancer is often advanced.
Asbestos Exposure Sites Near the City of Uncertain
We investigate every possible source of exposure for our Harrison County clients. Major historical sources in our region include:
- Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant (Karnack): Asbestos was used extensively in the high-temperature steam lines, power plants, and production facilities throughout this 8,493-acre complex.
- Railroad Maintenance: Workers at the Texas & Pacific or Southern Pacific facilities in Marshall were exposed via asbestos-containing brake shoes and locomotive insulation.
- Refinery and Chemical Plants: Many Uncertain residents commuted to the Eastman Chemical complex in Longview or the refineries in the Golden Triangle, where every process pipe was once wrapped in asbestos “mud” or insulation.
- Construction Trades: Electricians, plumbers, and insulators in Harrison County worked with products like Kaylo pipe covering and Transite board for decades.
Your Dual Recovery Pathway: Trust Funds and Civil Lawsuits
One of the most important things we teach our clients is that they are often entitled to multiple sources of compensation.
- Asbestos Bankruptcy Trusts: Because so many asbestos manufacturers filed for bankruptcy, the courts required them to set up trust funds to pay future victims. There are currently over 60 active trusts with approximately $30 billion in assets. We file claims with every trust whose products you encountered. A single worker may qualify for 5 to 10 separate trust claims.
- Civil Litigation: If the company that exposed you is still solvent (like John Crane Inc. or certain premises owners), we file a direct lawsuit. These cases can result in significantly higher recoveries for pain and suffering and lost earnings.
We pursue both pathways simultaneously to maximize your total recovery. 1-888-ATTY-911.
Learn more about the criteria for a high-value case from Ralph Manginello: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d690a218
Benzene and Industrial Chemical Exposure in the Haynesville Shale
The City of Uncertain sits atop the Haynesville Shale, one of the most productive natural gas formations in the country. While this has brought economic growth to Harrison County, it has also brought significant exposure to benzene—a sweet-smelling, colorless liquid that is a known Group 1 human carcinogen.
The Metabolism of Cancer: How Benzene Attacks Your Blood
Benzene is a component of crude oil and natural gas. In the oilfield, workers are exposed during drilling, fracking, and pipeline maintenance. When you inhale benzene vapor, it enters your bloodstream and travels to your liver. There, it is metabolized by the enzyme CYP2E1 into benzene oxide and subsequently into a highly toxic metabolite called muconaldehyde.
These metabolites travel to your bone marrow—the “factory” where your body makes blood cells. Muconaldehyde binds directly to the DNA of hematopoietic stem cells, causing specific chromosomal aberrations such as the t(8;21) or t(15;17) translocations. This damage prevents your bone marrow from producing healthy cells, leading to:
- Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML): A fast-growing cancer of the blood and bone marrow.
- Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS): A “pre-leukemic” condition where the marrow fails to produce enough functioning blood cells.
- Aplastic Anemia: A life-threatening condition where the body stops producing enough new blood cells.
Refinery and Pipeline Exposure Patterns
Workers in the City of Uncertain who maintained pipelines or worked at regional processing plants often handled benzene-containing solvents like naphtha or were exposed to “fugitive emissions” from leaking valves and pumps. OSHA’s current permissible exposure limit (PEL) for benzene is 1 part per million (ppm), but the scientific community has long known that there is no truly safe level of exposure. https://www.osha.gov/benzene
In 2024, a Pennsylvania jury awarded $725 million against ExxonMobil for a case involving benzene-induced leukemia. While results vary, these cases prove that juries are increasingly willing to punish corporations that knew the risks of benzene and failed to protect their workers.
If you worked in the Harrison County oilfields or refineries and have been diagnosed with leukemia or MDS, call us immediately. We know how to reconstruct your chemical exposure profile and hold the responsible parties accountable. 1-888-ATTY-911.
PFAS “Forever Chemicals” and Community Contamination in Harrison County
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are known as “forever chemicals” because the carbon-fluorine bond is one of the strongest in organic chemistry. They do not break down in the environment or the human body. For residents of the City of Uncertain, the primary risk of PFAS often comes from the use of Aqueous Film-Forming Foam (AFFF) at nearby military sites or industrial facilities.
The Toxicological Impact of PFAS
PFAS compounds bioaccumulate in your blood and organs. According to the C8 Science Panel and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), exposure to PFAS is linked to:
- Kidney Cancer and Testicular Cancer
- Thyroid Disease
- Ulcerative Colitis
- Preeclampsia (Pregnancy-induced hypertension)
- High Cholesterol (Dyslipidemia) that does not respond to diet changes
The EPA recently finalized a strict National Primary Drinking Water Regulation, setting the limit for PFOA and PFOS at just 4 parts per trillion (ppt). This reflects the extreme danger these chemicals pose even at vanishingly small concentrations. https://www.epa.gov/sdwa/and-polyfluoroalkyl-substances-pfas
Firefighter and Industrial AFFF Claims
If you served as a firefighter in Harrison County—whether in a municipal department or as part of an industrial fire brigade at a plant—you were likely exposed to PFAS in firefighting foam. We are currently participating in litigation against manufacturers like 3M and DuPont, who knew about the toxicity of PFAS for decades while continuing to sell AFFF to first responders.
As Ralph Manginello explains in his podcast on case timelines, mass torts like the PFAS litigation move through a specific bellwether process: https://share.transistor.fm/s/2c8431e6
The Hazardous Heritage: Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant (Superfund Site)
We cannot discuss toxic exposure in the City of Uncertain without addressing the Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant (LHAAP). Operating from World War II through the late 1990s, LHAAP was the primary production site for TNT, rocket motors, and pyrotechnics.
The site was added to the EPA National Priorities List (NPL) as a Superfund site in 1990 due to extensive contamination of soil and groundwater. Key contaminants identified include:
- Perchlorate: A chemical used in rocket fuel that disrupts thyroid function.
- Trichloroethylene (TCE): A solvent used for degreasing rocket motors, strongly linked to kidney cancer, liver cancer, and Parkinson’s disease.
- Heavy Metals: Including lead and arsenic.
If you lived near the facility or worked for a contractor onsite, your health may have been compromised by decades of environmental negligence. We help families in Uncertain and Karnack investigate whether their cancers or neurological conditions are linked to the LHAAP contamination plume. https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/sites/longhorn/index.html
Dangerous Industries: Protecting Workers in the City of Uncertain
Beyond latent toxic diseases, the City of Uncertain is home to workers in some of the most dangerous industries in America. At Attorney 911, we are more than just “toxic tort” lawyers; we are advocates for regular people who have been crushed, burned, or broken on the job.
Haynesville Shale Oilfield Injuries
Roughnecks and floorhands in East Texas face a fatality rate that is nearly 5 times higher than the average US worker. In the City of Uncertain area, we handle cases involving:
- Blowouts and Well Control Events: Leading to catastrophic fires and shrapnel injuries.
- Struck-By and Caught-In Accidents: Where drill pipe or iron-roughnecks cause traumatic amputations.
- H2S (Hydrogen Sulfide) Exposure: A single breath of “sour gas” at high concentrations can cause instant respiratory paralysis and death.
If your employer was a “non-subscriber” to Texas workers’ compensation, we can sue them directly for negligence. If they did subscribe, we identify “third-party” claims against the operator or other contractors on the rig site to secure full compensation.
Pipeline and Trench Collapses
Building the infrastructure for the Haynesville Shale requires deep excavation. Under OSHA standard 29 CFR 1926.652, any trench 5 feet or deeper must have a protective system—either shoring, shielding, or sloping. https://www.osha.gov/trenching-excavation
One cubic yard of soil weighs 3,000 pounds—as much as a compact car. When a trench wall collapses on a worker in Uncertain, death from “crush asphyxia” happens in minutes. These are not “accidents”; they are the result of contractors cutting corners on safety equipment. We find the evidence of their negligence and make them pay.
Railroad Injuries (FELA)
Harrison County has a deep railroad history. If you work for a railroad like Union Pacific or BNSF and were injured or developed cancer from diesel exhaust, you are protected by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA). Unlike workers’ comp, FELA allows you to sue the railroad for negligence and seek full, uncapped damages.
As Ralph discusses in his guide to “Million Dollar Cases,” the causation standards under FELA are more favorable to the worker than standard personal injury law. Watch his breakdown here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmMwE7GqUFI
Corporate Concealment: They Knew and They Let You Suffer
The most heartbreaking part of our work at Attorney 911 is seeing the documented proof that these injuries were preventable.
- The Sumner Simpson Letters (1935): The President of Raybestos-Manhattan wrote to the VP of Johns-Manville, saying, “I think the less said about asbestos, the better off we are.” They chose to keep asbestos in American lungs for another 40 years.
- The Monsanto Papers: Internal emails revealed that Monsanto ghostwrote studies to downplay the cancer risk of Roundup (glyphosate) while orchestrating a campaign to discredit international health agencies.
- 3M PFAS Memos: 3M’s own scientists confirmed that PFAS was accumulating in human blood in the 1970s. They buried the data while the chemicals entered the City of Uncertain’s water supply.
When corporations engage in this kind of concealment, we pursue punitive damages. These are damages awarded to punish the defendant and deter others from similar conduct. In many toxic exposure cases, punitive damages can be many times higher than the actual medical bills and lost wages.
The Evidence Preservation Emergency in Harrison County
In the City of Uncertain, the clock is your enemy. As soon as a corporation learns that a worker is sick, their “risk management” team goes into overdrive.
Evidence in toxic exposure cases is notoriously fragile:
- Facility Records: Work orders, industrial hygiene reports, and OSHA 300 logs may be “routinely” destroyed according to corporate retention schedules that happen to coincide with your diagnosis.
- Witnesses: Co-workers who can testify to the dust levels at a plant in 1985 are aging. Their memories and their testimony must be preserved via deposition immediately.
- Product ID: Identifying exactly which manufacturer’s asbestos was on a specific boiler requires forensic investigation of purchase orders and shipping manifests.
At Attorney 911, our lead case manager Leonor Olivo works with Ralph to initiate an immediate evidence-preservation protocol. We send “spoliation letters” to every potential defendant, legally demanding that they preserve all records related to your exposure.
As Tracey W. wrote in her review: “When I had my accident I didn’t know where to turn then I was referred to Manginello law firm… Leonora went to work and didn’t stop… I am very appreciative of all she has done for my case.”
Need to know how to document your own evidence? Listen to Ralph’s podcast on using your cellphone for case documentation: https://share.transistor.fm/s/a42daf06
Compensation Pathways: A Comprehensive Strategy
We don’t just file a lawsuit; we architect a recovery platform. A mesothelioma victim in the City of Uncertain may have four or five different sources of income available simultaneously:
| Pathway | Purpose | Strategic Advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Asbestos Trust Claims | Fast payment from bankrupt manufacturers | No need to go to court; pays out in months. |
| Civil Personal Injury Suit | Full damages from solvent defendants | Recovers for pain, suffering, and punitive damages. |
| Workers’ Compensation | Immediate medical and partial wage help | Provides a “floor” while we build the larger case. |
| VA Disability (PACT Act) | For veterans exposed during service | Tax-free monthly payments for service-connected illness. |
| Social Security (SSDI) | Federal disability for those unable to work | Critical for younger workers with benzene leukemia or silicosis. |
We handle the coordination between these systems so you don’t have to navigate the bureaucracy alone. We ensure that one claim doesn’t accidentally negate another.
Why Choose Attorney 911 for Your City of Uncertain Case?
In a city called Uncertain, there is one thing you can be sure of: the corporations that poisoned you will not pay voluntarily. They will hire the most expensive law firms in the country to tell you that you’re too late, that your exposure was too low, or that your illness is your own fault.
When you call Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña, you are hiring a team that has been through the fire. We don’t refer our big cases out; we litigate them. We provide every client with a high level of communication that is rare in this industry.
Stephanie H. shared her experience on Google: “She (Leonor) and her team were beyond amazing!!! She took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders and I just never felt so taken care of… I was trying to reach out to so many firms with no luck… she reassured me and took me seriously and she just really made me feel like I mattered.”
We believe you matter. We believe your family matters. And we believe the companies that did this should be made to pay.
- Principal Office: Houston, TX.
- Hablamos Español: Lupe Peña is bilingual and dedicated to serving the Spanish-speaking workforce of Harrison County.
- 24/7 Accessibility: We are Attorney 911 because we are your legal emergency responders.
Listen to Ralph discuss one of the pillars of our firm—working with your lawyer for the best outcome: https://share.transistor.fm/s/19d4eba4
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for City of Uncertain Residents
1. I worked at the Longhorn Ammunition Plant in the 80s. Is it too late to file an asbestos claim?
No. In Texas, the statute of limitations for mesothelioma and other latent diseases follows the “discovery rule.” The clock generally does not start ticking until you knew, or reasonably should have known, that you were sick and that your illness was caused by asbestos exposure. For mesothelioma, this usually means the clock starts at the date of your diagnosis.
2. Can I sue for benzene exposure if I currently work in the Haynesville Shale?
Yes. If you have been diagnosed with leukemia (AML), MDS, or another blood disorder linked to benzene, you may have a claim against the company that manufactured the chemicals you used or the site operator who failed to provide proper ventilation and PPE. Your immigration status does not affect your right to file a claim. https://share.transistor.fm/s/7787dfb4
3. What if the company that exposed me is out of business?
This is common in asbestos cases. We search for “successor corporations” (companies that bought the old company) or file claims against the massive bankruptcy trust funds set up specifically for this purpose. Even if the factory is gone, the money to pay for your injury is often still there.
4. Do I qualify for the Camp Lejeune Justice Act if I live in Uncertain now?
Yes. If you were stationed at, lived at, or worked at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina for at least 30 days between 1953 and 1987 and have a qualifying illness (like bladder cancer, kidney cancer, or Parkinson’s), you can file a claim. The CLJA is a federal law that applies to veterans and their families nationwide.
5. My husband died of lung cancer last year. Can I still file a claim?
You may be able to file a “Wrongful Death” action or a “Survival Action.” These allow the family to recover for the loss of companionship, lost income the husband would have provided, and the pain and suffering he experienced before he passed.
6. Will filing a lawsuit affect my Social Security or VA benefits?
Generally, a personal injury settlement is considered a separate recovery for your physical injury and does not count as “earned income” that would disqualify you from SSDI or VA disability. However, certain government programs have different rules, which is why having an experienced attorney to coordinate your claims is vital.
7. How long do these cases typically take to settle?
Trust fund claims can often be resolved within 4 to 12 months. Civil lawsuits against solvent defendants typically take 1 to 2 years, though we can often move the court for an “expedited trial date” if the patient’s health is rapidly declining. Review our podcast on settlement timelines: https://share.transistor.fm/s/2c8431e6
8. What does “no fee unless we win” really mean?
It means Attorney 911 takes all the financial risk. We pay for the experts, the medical records, the travel, and the court fees. If we do not recover money for you, you do not owe us a dime for our time or the thousands of dollars we spent building the case.
9. I was a smoker. Can I still win a mesothelioma case?
Yes. Smoking does not cause mesothelioma. Asbestos is the only known cause. For asbestos-related lung cancer, smoking and asbestos have a “synergistic” effect, meaning the asbestos was actually more dangerous to you as a smoker. The law does not let the chemical companies off the hook just because you smoked.
10. How do I prove I was exposed to asbestos 30 years ago?
We use a forensic process to reconstruct your “exposure history.” This includes interviewing your former co-workers, searching union dispatch records, and cross-referencing our database of which products were used at specific Texas job sites during certain eras. You tell us where you worked; we’ll find the evidence of what you breathed.
11. Is silica exposure in the oilfield as dangerous as asbestos?
It can be. Respirable crystalline silica from fracking sand causes silicosis—a scarring of the lungs that is irreversible and progressive. Much like asbestos, silica is a Group 1 carcinogen that leads to lung cancer. We are seeing an epidemic of “accelerated silicosis” in younger oilfield and countertop fabrication workers today.
12. Can my employer fire me for filing a toxic exposure claim?
Federal and state laws prohibit “retaliatory discharge.” If an employer fires you for exercising your legal right to seek compensation for a workplace injury or reporting an OSHA violation, we can add a retaliation claim to your lawsuit, which can significantly increase the damages.
13. Where should I go for treatment in East Texas?
For cancer, we often recommend patients seek a second opinion at an NCI-designated center. MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston is the gold standard for mesothelioma and leukemia: https://www.mdanderson.org. Locally, CHRISTUS Good Shepherd and the Texas Oncology network in Marshall and Longview provide high-quality care.
14. What are the first signs of mesothelioma?
Often it starts with a persistent dry cough, shortness of breath after minor activity, or a “heaviness” in the chest. Many of our clients were initially treated for pneumonia or bronchitis before a CT scan revealed a “pleural effusion” or fluid around the lung. Always tell your doctor about your industrial work history if you have these symptoms.
15. What are PFAS “Forever Chemicals” used for?
They are used in firefighting foams (AFFF), non-stick cookware (Teflon), waterproof clothing (Gore-Tex), and food packaging. They are dangerous because they never leave your body and interfere with your endocrine and immune systems.
16. How much is the average mesothelioma settlement?
While cases vary, average mesothelioma settlements range between $1 million and $1.4 million. Full trial verdicts can be much higher, often exceeding $5 million to $10 million depending on the degree of corporate negligence we can prove.
17. Can family members get sick from my work clothes?
Yes. This is called “Secondary” or “Take-Home” exposure. If you brought asbestos fibers or silica dust home on your work shirt and your wife laundered those clothes, she may have inhaled enough fibers to develop mesothelioma decades later. These are valid, compensable legal claims.
18. Does Ralph Manginello really give his cell number to clients?
Yes. As Brian B. noted in his Google review: “I got to speak with Ralph Manginello once and knew quickly the way his Firm was ran. Very informative and professional… I would unquestionably recommend this Firm.” We pride ourselves on availability.
19. If I lived in Uncertain during the Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant operations, can I sue?
If we can prove that your specific illness was caused by the documented groundwater or soil contamination from the site, yes. This would fall under “community exposure” or “environmental toxic tort” law.
20. What is a “B-Reader” and why do I need one?
A B-Reader is a radiologist who has passed a NIOSH exam specifically for identifying dust-related lung diseases (asbestosis and silicosis) on X-rays. A standard hospital radiologist often misses the subtle signs of occupational disease—we ensure your films are read by a B-Reader for legal proof.
21. What happens during a deposition?
A deposition is where the defense lawyers get to ask you questions under oath. It can be intimidating, but we prepare you extensively. Lupe Peña’s insider knowledge of how defense lawyers try to “trap” plaintiffs is invaluable during this phase. Watch our video on deposition prep: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_qCwqfeRRs
22. Do people in the City of Uncertain prefer settlement or trial?
Every client’s goals are different. A settlement provides guaranteed money now, which is vital for medical bills. A trial offers the chance for a larger verdict and public accountability. We prepare every case as if it is going to trial, which is the only way to force the insurance companies to offer a fair settlement.
23. Can I file a claim if my doctor said my cancer is genetic?
Don’t take the first answer. Doctors are focused on treatment, not legal causation. Even if you have a genetic predisposition, a toxic exposure can be the “triggering event” or “substantial factor.” Our expert toxicologists and epidemiologists often disagree with initial medical findings by looking deeper into your work history.
24. What are “Non-Economic” damages?
These are damages for the things money can’t buy—the physical pain you feel every day, the terror of knowing your life is being shortened, and the “Loss of Consortium” your spouse experiences as your health fails. We fight to ensure these are a major part of your settlement.
25. How do I start?
The first step is a simple, free phone call. There is no paperwork to sign and no obligation. We just listen to your story and tell you if we think you have a case. Call Attorney 911 at 1-888-ATTY-911 today.
Closing: Accountability for the Workers of Harrison County
The cypresses of Uncertain have stood for centuries, watching generations of East Texans work hard to provide for their families. You kept your end of the bargain—you showed up, you worked the shifts, and you built the industry that made this region great. But the corporations did not keep their end. They sent you into toxic environments without the respirators, the ventilation, or the warnings that science required.
Your diagnosis is not the end of your story. It is the beginning of a fight for accountability. Whether you are battling a terminal mesothelioma diagnosis or have lost a loved one to a refinery explosion, Attorney 911 is here to be your advocate, your protector, and your pit bull in the courtroom.
Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña are ready to take that weight off your shoulders. Join the 270+ clients who have given us a 4.9-star rating on Google and let us fight for the compensation you and your family deserve.
“You are NOT a pest to them… You are FAMILY to them and they protect and fight for you as such,” says Chad H. We are ready to make you part of that family.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911. 24/7 Litigation Support. Free Consultation.
Attorney 911: Your Legal Emergency Response for Toxic Exposure in City of Uncertain.