Car Accident Lawyers in Franklin County, Texas: When Rural Roads Turn Deadly
The impact shattered your windshield at 2:17 AM on US-67 just outside Mount Vernon. One moment you were heading home toward Franklin County; the next, an 18-wheeler crossed the centerline, or a drunk driver failed to negotiate that curve on Farm-to-Market Road 900, or perhaps you hit black ice on a rural stretch where no streetlights exist for miles. In Franklin County—where rural roads make up the majority of our travel and emergency response can take 30 minutes or longer—every crash has the potential to become catastrophic.
At Attorney911, we know Franklin County. We know that while Harris County might see 115,173 crashes annually, the crashes here in Franklin County—with its population of roughly 9,000 spread across 295 square miles of Northeast Texas farmland and timber—are 2.66 times more likely to be fatal than those in urban Houston. We know that when you’re injured on Franklin County’s rural highways, you need a legal team that understands not just Texas law, but the specific challenges of rural accident litigation: the longer EMS response times, the air ambulance flights to Tyler or Sulphur Springs, and the reality that major trucking corridors like US-67 cut right through our community, bringing 80,000-pound vehicles past Mount Vernon High School and through our agricultural zones.
If you’ve been hurt in a motor vehicle accident in Franklin County—whether on the four-lane sections of US-67, the winding Farm-to-Market roads, or in a collision with an oilfield truck heading to the nearby East Texas oil patch—you need more than just a lawyer. You need a fighter who understands that “rural” doesn’t mean “less important.” You need Attorney911. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 right now. We answer 24/7.
The Franklin County Reality: Rural Crashes Kill at Alarming Rates
In 2024, Texas recorded 4,150 traffic fatalities—that’s one death every 2 hours and 7 minutes across our state. While urban counties like Dallas and Harris grab headlines with sheer volume, here in Franklin County and our neighboring rural communities, we face a deadlier statistical reality. According to TxDOT data, rural crashes are 2.66 times more likely to result in death than urban crashes, despite representing far fewer total incidents.
The physics are brutal and unforgiving. On Franklin County’s sections of US-67—a major trucking corridor connecting Dallas to Shreveport—speeds reach 75 miles per hour, yet there’s often minimal shoulder and no median barrier. When a driver falls asleep, texts, or drifts across the centerline on these two-lane stretches near Mount Vernon or Winnsboro, the result is often a head-on collision at combined speeds exceeding 130 miles per hour. In 2024, 617 people died in head-on collisions across Texas, and 800 died from “Failed to Drive in Single Lane”—the number one fatal contributing factor statewide. These numbers disproportionately impact rural counties like Franklin, where narrow lanes, lack of lighting, and long distances between hospitals create perfect storms for fatal outcomes.
Consider this: 90.3% of all Texas crashes occur in clear weather, demolishing the myth that wrecks only happen in storms. In Franklin County, where Farm-to-Market roads like FM 900 and FM 115 serve as vital connectors between agricultural operations and Highway 67, a sunny afternoon can turn deadly when an overloaded logging truck descends a hill too fast or an oilfield service vehicle blows a tire. Dark, unlighted roads account for only 9.3% of crashes but 31.4% of fatalities—making them 4.4 times more deadly. For Franklin County residents traveling these roads between Mount Vernon and Sulphur Springs after sunset, the risk is real and present.
The trucking data is equally concerning. Texas leads the nation with 39,393 commercial vehicle accidents in 2024, resulting in 608 deaths. Many of these involve the very corridors traversing Franklin County. US-67 sees constant freight traffic between Dallas-Fort Worth and the Shreveport-Bossier City metro, including tanker trucks serving the East Texas oil fields and agricultural haulers moving timber and livestock. When these 80,000-pound vehicles collide with passenger cars on Franklin County’s rural stretches, the results are catastrophic: 97% of deaths in two-vehicle truck-car crashes are the occupants of the smaller vehicle.
The Accident Types We Handle in Franklin County
Not all motor vehicle accidents are the same—especially not in Franklin County, where the accident profile reflects our rural geography, agricultural economy, and position along major freight corridors. At Attorney911, we focus on the accident types that disproportionately injure our friends and neighbors in Mount Vernon, Scroggins, Lake Cypress Springs, and throughout this beautiful but dangerous countryside.
Car Accidents: The Daily Danger on Franklin County Roads
Car accidents remain the most common injury source in Franklin County, ranging from rear-end collisions at the intersection of Main Street and Kaufman Street in downtown Mount Vernon to high-speed crashes on US-67. In 2024, Failed to Control Speed caused 131,978 crashes statewide—the highest contributor by volume. On Franklin County’s narrow FM roads, where speeds drop but visibility is limited by timber stands and agricultural equipment, even a 45-mph collision can cause devastating injuries.
The hidden danger in rural car accidents is the delayed injury. What feels like “just whiplash” initially can develop into herniated discs requiring spinal fusion surgery six months later. We’ve seen this repeatedly in Franklin County cases. As client Stephanie Hernandez described: “When I felt I had no hope or direction, Leonor reached out to me…She took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders.” That’s because we don’t just handle your property damage and immediate ER visit from Titus Regional Medical Center in Mount Pleasant—we monitor your health trajectory because we know rural accidents often result in injuries that worsen over time.
Insurance companies love to settle Franklin County car accident claims quickly—often before you’ve even seen a specialist in Tyler or Texarkana. They’ll offer $3,000 to $5,000 for “soft tissue” injuries, hoping you’ll sign a release before an MRI reveals the true extent of the damage. Lupe Peña worked for years at a national defense firm, learning firsthand how large insurance companies value claims. He knows that once you sign that release, you can never come back for more—even if you need surgery later. This insider knowledge is your unfair advantage when facing adjusters who think rural victims won’t fight back.
18-Wheeler and Commercial Truck Accidents: When 80,000 Pounds Enter Franklin County
US-67 isn’t just a local road—it’s a vital freight corridor. Every day, 18-wheelers carrying goods between Dallas, Shreveport, and beyond traverse Franklin County, passing within feet of passenger vehicles on stretches with no shoulder and limited visibility. When these trucks crash here, the results are often fatal or permanently disabling.
The physics are terrifying. An 80,000-pound truck carries 16.5 times more kinetic energy than a 4,000-pound car. At 65 mph, a loaded tractor-trailer needs 525 feet to stop— nearly two football fields. When a truck driver fails to adjust for the curves near Lake Bob Sandlin or the grades approaching the Franklin County line from Hopkins County, devastation follows.
Ralph Manginello brings 27+ years of experience to these cases, including federal court admission to the Southern District of Texas. This matters because trucking cases often involve federal regulations— specifically the 49 CFR provisions governing hours of service, commercial driver standards, and electronic logging devices (ELDs). When we investigate a truck accident in Franklin County, we immediately send spoliation letters to preserve: ELD data, ECM (black box) downloads, Driver Qualification Files under 49 CFR § 391.51, maintenance records under Part 396, and hours of service logs under Part 395.
We’ve recovered millions of dollars for families facing trucking-related wrongful death cases. In one recent case involving a car accident that led to amputation due to staff infections during treatment, we secured a settlement in the millions—not the $50,000 the insurance company initially offered. That’s the difference between hiring a settlement mill and hiring Attorney911.
Single-Vehicle and Run-Off-Road Crashes: Franklin County’s Silent Epidemic
Rural counties like Franklin see a disproportionate share of single-vehicle crashes—often the most misunderstood injury cases. When a driver runs off Farm-to-Market Road 115 and hits a tree, or rolls over on the soft shoulder of a county road near Scroggins, insurance companies assume driver error and deny claims. But we dig deeper.
Was there a pothole or shoulder drop-off that caused the driver to lose control? Under the Texas Tort Claims Act, Franklin County or the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) may bear liability for road defects. Was the driver forced off the road by a phantom vehicle that fled the scene? Your own UM/UIM coverage may apply—even if the other driver was never identified. Was the vehicle defective? Product liability claims against manufacturers for tire blowouts, steering failures, or rollover propensity can yield significant settlements.
These cases require immediate preservation of the vehicle itself—do not let your car be totaled or destroyed before our investigators can examine it for defects. We handle these technical investigations because Ralph Manginello’s admission to federal court and experience in complex litigation—including the $2.1 billion BP Texas City Refinery explosion case that killed 15 workers—means we have the resources to take on manufacturers and government entities.
Drunk Driving Accidents: The 2 AM Danger
In 2024, 1,053 people died in DUI-alcohol crashes across Texas—representing 25.37% of all traffic fatalities. The deadliest hour is 2:00-2:59 AM Sunday, when bars close under TABC regulations. For Franklin County, this means the rural highways connecting to Lake Cypress Springs and other recreational areas see drunk drivers leaving establishments in Mount Vernon, Sulphur Springs, or Winnsboro.
What many victims don’t know is that under Texas Dram Shop Act (Alcoholic Beverage Code § 2.02), the bar or restaurant that overserved the obviously intoxicated driver may be liable for your injuries—adding a commercial insurance policy of $1 million or more to your recovery options. Our firm, including Lupe Peña who practices personal injury and dram shop claims, knows how to investigate alcohol service records, obtain surveillance footage from establishments on Houston Street or Main Street in Mount Vernon, and hold these establishments accountable.
Moreover, if the drunk driver is charged with Intoxication Assault or Intoxication Manslaughter—felonies under Texas law—the punitive damages cap is removed entirely. That means the jury can award any amount they see fit to punish gross negligence. As Ralph Manginello notes regarding institutional accountability: “At some point this has to stop. There’s gotta be someone or people… that say, look, ‘That’s not part of what we’re about here.'” Whether it’s a fraternity hazing case or a drunk driving case, we pursue maximum accountability.
Head-On Collisions: The Rural Highway Killer
Head-on collisions killed 617 people in Texas in 2024, with a fatality rate of 9.9%—meaning nearly one in ten head-on crashes results in death. On Franklin County’s undivided rural highways, where US-67 narrows to two lanes and FM roads offer no median protection, these crashes often occur when a driver crosses the centerline due to distraction, fatigue, or impairment.
The injuries in head-on collisions are catastrophic: traumatic brain injuries from skull impacts with windshields, spinal cord injuries from axial loading forces, aortic tears from sudden deceleration, and crush injuries from intrusion into the passenger compartment. Settlement values for these cases range from $200,000 to $5 million or more, especially when punitive damages apply for gross negligence.
Our firm’s $10 million University of Houston hazing lawsuit—which generated coverage from KHOU, ABC13, Click2Houston, FOX 26, and the Houston Chronicle—demonstrates our willingness to take on catastrophic injury cases that other firms might consider too complex or too politically sensitive. We bring that same tenacity to Franklin County head-on collision cases.
Motorcycle Accidents: Fighting Bias on Rural Roads
Franklin County’s winding roads through the Piney Woods attract motorcyclists, but rural drivers often fail to see bikes at intersections. In 2024, 585 motorcyclists died in Texas, with 40% of fatal motorcycle crashes occurring at intersections—often when a car turns left in front of an oncoming bike. This is the classic “left hook” scenario, and it happens frequently on Franklin County’s rural highways where drivers expect only agricultural traffic.
Insurance companies stereotype motorcyclists as “reckless,” but we fight this bias with facts. As client Chad Harris said: “You are NOT a pest to them and you are NOT just some client…You are FAMILY to them.” We investigate the crash scene immediately, preserve skid marks and debris fields, and use accident reconstruction to prove the car driver violated your right-of-way.
Commercial Vehicle and Delivery Truck Accidents
Beyond 18-wheelers, Franklin County sees significant commercial traffic—from logging trucks hauling timber from the Sabine National Forest vicinity, to agricultural transports, to delivery vehicles servicing our rural community. Walmart, Amazon, FedEx, and UPS all operate vehicles through or near Franklin County, and when their drivers cause accidents, these corporations deploy rapid-response teams to minimize liability.
Amazon, for example, uses the Delivery Service Partner (DSP) model, claiming their drivers are “independent contractors” rather than employees. We know how to pierce this corporate veil by proving Amazon controls routes, monitors drivers through AI cameras (Netradyne), and sets delivery quotas that encourage speeding on rural roads like FM 900. Similarly, FedEx Ground uses Independent Service Providers (ISPs), but courts increasingly find sufficient control to impose liability on FedEx corporate.
Our former insurance defense attorney, Lupe Peña, knows exactly how these corporate defendants structure their insurance programs to minimize payouts. He spent years calculating reserve amounts and determining settlement authority limits. Now he uses that knowledge to force these companies to pay what your case is truly worth.
The Insurance Defense Playbook: Lupe’s Insider Advantage
When you’re injured in a Franklin County accident—whether on the four-lane stretch of US-67 or a remote county road—the insurance company immediately activates protocols designed to minimize your recovery. They hope you don’t know what they’re doing. We know, because Lupe Peña used to run these plays for the other side.
Tactic 1: The Confusion Campaign. Adjusters will tell you there’s “no coverage” or only minimal limits, hoping you won’t investigate umbrella policies or corporate coverage. In truck accident cases, we often find multiple layers: the driver’s $750,000 policy, the motor carrier’s $1 million policy, excess coverage of $5 million or more, and occasionally the MCS-90 endorsement—a federal guarantee that ensures payment to injured third parties even if the policy would otherwise exclude coverage.
Tactic 2: The Independent Medical Examination (IME). Insurance companies send you to doctors they pay $2,000-$5,000 per exam to declare you “not that injured” or suffering from “pre-existing conditions.” Lupe knows these specific doctors and their biases—he hired them for years. We prepare you for these examinations and challenge biased reports with our own medical experts who understand the true nature of rural accident injuries—particularly the delayed onset of spinal injuries common in rear-end collisions on country roads.
Tactic 3: Surveillance and Social Media Monitoring. Insurance investigators video you doing normal daily activities, then freeze one frame to argue you’re not really hurt. As Lupe explains: “I’ve reviewed hundreds of surveillance videos and social media posts as defense attorney. Insurance companies take innocent activity out of context. They freeze ONE frame of you moving ‘normally’ and ignore the 10 minutes of you struggling before and after.” We advise all Franklin County clients to make social media private immediately and assume they’re being watched.
Tactic 4: Comparative Fault Attacks. Under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 33.001, if you’re found 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. Even 20% fault reduces your recovery by 20%. Insurance companies exploit this by blaming rural victims for “driving too fast for conditions” on roads they know are inherently dangerous. We fight these attacks with accident reconstruction and Lupe’s insider knowledge of how insurance calculates fault percentages.
Tactic 5: Delay Until Desperation. They know that in Franklin County, where medical providers may be 30-45 minutes away and family incomes are often modest, financial pressure mounts quickly. They’ll delay until you’re desperate enough to accept a lowball offer. We file lawsuits to force deadlines and increase pressure on their reserves.
What Texas Law Means for Franklin County Accident Victims
The 51% Bar Rule (Modified Comparative Negligence)
You can recover damages if you’re 50% or less at fault. If you’re 51% at fault, you get $0. Insurance companies know this and try to push you over the threshold. We fight to establish clear liability—particularly in rear-end collisions, red-light violations, and DUI cases where negligence is undisputed.
Dram Shop Liability (Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code § 2.02)
If a bar in Franklin County served a patron who was obviously intoxicated (slurred speech, stumbling, aggression), and that patron caused your accident, the establishment is liable. This applies to establishments on Main Street in Mount Vernon, venues near Lake Cypress Springs, and restaurants throughout the county.
Statute of Limitations (Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.003)
You have TWO YEARS from the date of injury to file suit. Miss this deadline, and your case is barred forever. For Franklin County residents, this means acting quickly to preserve evidence—the black box data, skid marks, and witness memories that fade fast on rural roads.
Stowers Doctrine
If we send a settlement demand within policy limits that is unreasonably rejected, the insurer becomes liable for the entire verdict, even if it exceeds policy limits. This is a powerful tool in clear-liability cases common in Franklin County—particularly rear-end collisions and DUI accidents.
The Damages You Can Recover
Franklin County accident victims are entitled to full compensation under Texas law:
Economic Damages (No Cap):
- Medical expenses (ER at Titus Regional, ambulance transport, surgery, rehabilitation, future care)
- Lost wages (including agricultural income if you can’t return to farming/ranching)
- Loss of earning capacity (lifelong reduction in ability to work)
- Property damage
- Out-of-pocket expenses (transportation to Tyler or Dallas for specialist care)
Non-Economic Damages (No Cap in Standard PI Cases):
- Pain and suffering
- Mental anguish (PTSD, driving anxiety after rural road trauma)
- Physical impairment
- Disfigurement (scarring from glass or burns)
- Loss of consortium (impact on marriage)
Punitive Damages: Available for gross negligence, drunk driving, or intentional misconduct. If the defendant is charged with a felony DWI, there is NO CAP on punitive damages.
Our case results speak to our capability: from the multi-million dollar settlement for a client who suffered brain injury with vision loss when a log dropped on him, to the multi-million dollar settlement for a client who lost a limb to post-accident infections, to our work on the $2.1 billion BP explosion litigation, Attorney911 has the track record to maximize Franklin County recoveries.
Medical Treatment in Franklin County: Know Your Options
After an accident in Franklin County, immediate care typically comes from Titus Regional Medical Center in Mount Pleasant or Christus Trinity Mother Frances Hospital in Tyler for serious trauma. For catastrophic injuries requiring Level I trauma care, patients are often airlifted to University Hospital in San Antonio, Memorial Hermann in Houston, or Parkland in Dallas.
We help clients navigate medical liens, connect with specialists even in rural areas, and ensure that subrogation claims from health insurers (like Aetna, Blue Cross, or Medicare) are negotiated down to maximize your net recovery.
Common injuries we see from Franklin County accidents include:
- Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI): From concussions to severe diffuse axonal injury
- Spinal Cord Injuries: Paraplegia and quadriplegia from rollover and head-on crashes
- Herniated Discs: Often requiring fusion surgery after rural rear-end collisions
- Orthopedic Trauma: Compound fractures requiring surgical repair
- Crush Injuries: Common in tractor-trailer underride accidents
The 48-Hour Protocol: Protecting Your Franklin County Case
Hour 1-6:
- Safety First: Get off the roadway if possible—rural highways have high secondary collision rates.
- Call 911: Request both law enforcement (Franklin County Sheriff’s Office or Texas DPS) and EMS.
- Document Everything: Photograph all vehicles, the scene, skid marks (if visible on rural pavement), and your injuries.
- Witnesses: Get names and numbers—rural witnesses often leave before police arrive.
- Medical Attention: Go to the ER even if you feel fine—adrenaline masks injuries.
Hour 6-24:
- Preserve all digital evidence (texts, call logs)
- Do NOT give recorded statements to insurance
- Make social media private immediately
- Contact Attorney911: 1-888-ATTY-911
Hour 24-48:
- We send preservation letters to prevent destruction of evidence (black box data, surveillance from nearby businesses on Main Street or US-67)
- We begin investigation of all liable parties
- We handle all insurance communications so you can focus on healing
Why Franklin County Chooses Attorney911
Ralph Manginello has spent 27+ years fighting for injury victims. A Memorial High School graduate (Houston) and UT Austin alumnus, he understands Texas families. His federal court admission to the Southern District of Texas means he can handle complex interstate trucking cases that often start in Franklin County but involve carriers from across the country.
Lupe Peña brings something rare: years of experience working for a national defense firm where he learned exactly how insurance companies value claims, delay settlements, and minimize payouts. Now he fights for you. Fluent in Spanish, he serves Franklin County’s Hispanic community with cultural competency.
Our 251+ Google reviews with a 4.9-star rating reflect our commitment to communication. As Dame Haskett noted: “Consistent communication and not one time did i call and not get a clear answer…Ralph reached out personally.” Or as Glenda Walker shared: “They make you feel like family and even though the process may take some time, they make it feel like a breeze. They fought for me to get every dime I deserved.”
We work on contingency—33.33% before trial, 40% if a trial is necessary—and advanced case expenses are our responsibility, not yours. You pay nothing unless we win.
Your Questions Answered: Franklin County Car Accident FAQ
What should I do immediately after a car accident in Franklin County?
Call 911 immediately. Document the scene with photos, get witness information, and seek medical attention even if you feel fine—adrenaline often masks serious injuries. Do not give a recorded statement to the other driver’s insurance company. Call Attorney911 at 1-888-ATTY-911 before signing anything.
How long do I have to file a lawsuit in Franklin County?
Under Texas law, you have two years from the date of the accident. However, if a government vehicle is involved (like a Franklin County road maintenance truck), you may have only six months to file notice. Call us immediately to protect your rights.
What if the other driver was uninsured or underinsured?
Approximately 14% of Texas drivers are uninsured. If you have UM/UIM coverage on your own policy, it pays for your injuries even if the at-fault driver has no insurance or insufficient limits. This coverage frequently applies to Franklin County pedestrian and cyclist accidents as well—many people don’t know their auto policy covers them even when not in their vehicle.
Can I sue if I was partially at fault for the accident in Franklin County?
Yes, under Texas’s 51% modified comparative negligence rule, you can recover damages if you are 50% or less at fault. However, your recovery is reduced by your fault percentage. If you’re 20% at fault, you recover 80% of your damages. Insurance companies try to maximize your fault percentage—we fight to minimize it.
What is my case worth?
Every case is unique. A soft tissue injury might settle for $15,000-$60,000, while a surgical herniation ranges from $132,000 to over $1 million. Catastrophic injuries like TBI or paralysis can reach $4.77 million to $25.88 million in lifetime costs. We evaluate based on medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and long-term prognosis.
Will I have to go to court in Franklin County?
Most cases settle without trial. However, we prepare every case as if it will go to trial—this pressures insurance companies to offer fair settlements. If a trial is necessary, Ralph Manginello’s 27+ years of trial experience and federal court admission serve you well in the 41st Judicial District Court in Mount Vernon or federal court in the Eastern District of Texas (Texarkana Division).
Can undocumented immigrants file injury claims in Franklin County?
Yes. Immigration status does not affect your right to compensation in Texas. Our office protects your confidentiality, and Zulema and other bilingual staff ensure Spanish-speaking victims understand every step of the process. As Celia Dominguez noted: “Especially Miss Zulema, who is always very kind and always translates.”
What if the trucking company says their driver was an independent contractor?
This is a common defense with companies like FedEx Ground and Amazon DSPs. We investigate the actual control the company exercises over the driver—setting routes, monitoring with cameras, mandating schedules. If control exists, we pierce the independent contractor veil and hold the corporate parent liable.
How soon should I hire a lawyer after a Franklin County accident?
Immediately. Evidence disappears fast—skid marks fade, surveillance footage from businesses along US-67 or Main Street is deleted in 7-30 days, and black box data in trucks overwrites in 30-180 days. We send spoliation letters within 24 hours of retention to preserve critical evidence.
What if I was in an accident with an 18-wheeler on US-67?
Federal regulations apply. We immediately investigate the driver’s Hours of Service logs under 49 CFR Part 395, Driver Qualification File under § 391.51, and maintenance records under Part 396. We check the carrier’s CSA scores and out-of-service history. These technical investigations require attorneys who know federal trucking law—not just general personal injury practice.
Can I sue the bar that served the drunk driver who hit me?
Yes, under the Texas Dram Shop Act, if the bar served an obviously intoxicated person who then caused your injury. This applies to establishments in Franklin County and surrounding areas. This creates a second source of recovery beyond the driver’s insurance.
What happens to my medical bills while the case is pending?
We work with medical providers to hold bills in abeyance or arrange treatment on a lien basis. We also fight to reduce health insurance subrogation liens so you keep more of your settlement. Our goal is ensuring you get treatment without financial ruin.
Your Fight Starts with One Call
Franklin County is your home. The rolling hills around Lake Cypress Springs, the community at Mount Vernon High School, the agricultural heritage that defines Northeast Texas—these matter. When a negligent driver or a corporate trucking operation harms you on these roads you know by heart, you deserve justice that understands both the rural reality and the legal complexity.
Attorney911 brings 27+ years of proven results, federal court experience, and the insider knowledge of a former insurance defense attorney to your Franklin County case. We’ve recovered over $50 million for Texas families, handled the $2.1 billion BP litigation, and currently fight the $10 million University of hazing case that generates national headlines.
Don’t let the insurance company tell you what your case is worth. Don’t let distance from Houston or Dallas keep you from world-class legal representation. We come to Franklin County. We know the 41st Judicial District Court. We know the local medical providers and the specific challenges of rural accident reconstruction.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 right now. The consultation is free. We answer 24/7. We don’t get paid unless we win. Hablamos Español. Your recovery starts with someone picking up the phone who actually cares—who treats you like Kelly Hunsicker described: “Leonor and Amanda were amazing, they walked me through everything,” or like Jamin Marroquin experienced: “tenacious, accessible, and determined throughout the 19 months.”
Justice isn’t just for big cities. It’s for Mount Vernon. It’s for Franklin County. It’s for you. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today.