Industrial Betrayal in Marion County: Why Your Workplace Disease Isn’t Just “Bad Luck”
For more than a century, Marion County has been a crossroads of East Texas commerce. From the mid-19th-century steamboats that crowded the banks of Big Cypress Bayou in Jefferson to the Texas & Pacific Railway lines that transformed North Northeast Texas, the workers here built the backbone of the region. But those who worked the docks, the rail yards, and the manufacturing facilities across Marion County were often breathing in a silent, slow-acting poison. While the steam whistles blew and the industry thrived, microscopic asbestos fibers and carcinogenic chemical vapors were settling into the lungs and bone marrow of our neighbors. Decades later, families in Jefferson, Lassater, and Kellyville are receiving devastating diagnoses like mesothelioma and leukemia—and they are being told it was unavoidable.
We are here to tell you that it wasn’t unavoidable. It was preventable. At Attorney 911, led by founding attorney Ralph Manginello and associate attorney Lupe Peña, we know that the corporations responsible for your exposure often had the data, the medical studies, and the internal warnings in their files long before you ever set foot on the job. They chose production quotas over your life. Today, those same companies and their insurance carriers are counting on you not knowing your rights. They hope the 40-year gap between your exposure and your diagnosis will help them hide from accountability. They are wrong.
With 27+ years of experience and a track record that includes litigating against some of the largest corporations in the world, including the landmark BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation, Ralph Manginello and our team understand the specialized legal landscape of East Texas. We don’t just file papers; we investigate the industrial history of Marion County to uncover exactly who exposed you. Whether you worked on the historic railway lines, in the timber mills, or in the industrial hubs of nearby Longview and Marshall, we treat your case as the legal emergency it is.
The survival of your family’s financial future depends on acting quickly. Microscopic evidence is destroyed daily, and witnesses can disappear. In Marion County, the corporations have a team of defense lawyers ready to suppress your claim. You deserve a team that has seen their playbook from the inside and knows exactly how to tear it apart.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential consultation. We work on a contingency fee basis, which means you pay nothing unless we win your case.
https://attorney911.com/
The Insider Advantage: Why Lupe Peña Shifting Sides Matters for Marion County Victims
In the world of toxic exposure litigation, most law firms look the same from the outside. They all claim to be “aggressive,” but few can tell you exactly how the corporate defense machine operates. At Attorney 911, we have a nuclear differentiator. Our associate attorney, Lupe Peña, spent years working for a national defense firm representing large insurance companies. He sat in the conference rooms where these massive entities decided which claims to fight, which to delay, and how to minimize the suffering of workers in places like Marion County.
By switching sides, Lupe brought the corporate “playbook” with him. He knows the specific psychological tactics they use during depositions to trip up injured workers. He understands the internal metrics insurance adjusters use to undervalue a mesothelioma or benzene claim. This insider knowledge allows us to anticipate the defense’s next move before they even make it. For a resident of Jefferson or an industrial worker near Highway 59, having an attorney who was once on the “other side” means your case is built to withstand the specific strategies the defense will use to deny you justice.
Ralph Manginello’s decades of trial experience combined with Lupe’s defense-side history creates a formidable team for any corporate defendant. When Ralph Manginello was part of the litigation team for the BP Texas City Refinery explosion—a case that ultimately involved $2.1 billion—he learned that no corporation, no matter its size, is above the law. We bring that same level of high-stakes litigation experience to every toxic exposure case in Marion County.
As Chad H. shared in a verified Google review: “Atty. Manginello stepped in and absolutely fought for us. A true PITT BULL and fighter. He don’t play!” We bring that pit bull energy to every deposition and every court hearing in the Eastern District of Texas. We know you are facing the fight of your life. We are here to make sure you aren’t fighting it alone.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911. The corporation that poisoned you has a team of lawyers. Now you have one too.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc
The Anchor Case: Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure in Marion County
Mesothelioma is a uniquely cruel disease. It does not appear immediately after you breathe in a toxic fiber. Instead, it waits. It can lie dormant for 20, 30, or even 50 years, while the microscopic asbestos fibers you inhaled decades ago slowly destroy your body from the inside. Many victims in Marion County, specifically those who worked in the historical steam-vessel industries on the bayou or the railroad shops that once defined the region, are only now receiving their diagnosis.
The Biological Mechanism of Asbestos: How It Kills at the Cellular Level
To understand why you have a legal claim, you must understand the science that the asbestos industry tried to hide. Asbestos is a silicate mineral that breaks down into microscopic, needle-like fibers. When these fibers are disturbed—during the cutting of insulation, the grinding of brake pads, or the removal of old pipe lagging—they become airborne. They are so small they are invisible to the naked eye.
When you inhale these fibers, they travel deep into your lungs, reaching the alveoli (air sacs). Because of their shape and composition, asbestos fibers are “biopersistent.” Your body has a natural defense mechanism called macrophages—specialized white blood cells that “eat” and digest foreign particles. However, asbestos fibers are often too long for the macrophages to encapsulate. This leads to a process called “frustrated phagocytosis.”
The macrophage essentially “pops” while trying to digest the fiber, releasing a cascade of inflammatory cytokines (like TNF-α and IL-1β) and reactive oxygen species (ROS). This creates a permanent state of chronic inflammation in the mesothelial lining (the pleura). Over decades, this inflammation causes oxidative DNA damage, deactivating critical tumor suppressor genes like BAP1 and p16. Eventually, a single mutated cell begins to divide uncontrollably, forming the malignant tumors known as mesothelioma.
For more information on the mechanism of asbestos-related cancer, visit the National Cancer Institute:
https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/substances/asbestos/asbestos-fact-sheet
The Symptoms of Mesothelioma: Recognition Triggers
In many cases, the early signs of mesothelioma are dismissed as something else—pleurisy, pneumonia, or just “getting older.” If you worked in the industrial sectors of Marion County and are experiencing these symptoms, you must tell your doctor about your asbestos history:
- Pleural Mesothelioma (Lungs): Persistent dry cough, shortness of breath (dyspnea), and “one-sided” chest pain that feels like a dull ache or a sharp stab when you breathe deeply.
- Peritoneal Mesothelioma (Abdomen): Unexplained abdominal swelling (ascites), weight loss, and changes in bowel habits.
- Late-Stage Indicators: Night sweats, extreme fatigue, and coughing up blood (hemoptysis).
The Dual Pathway to Compensation: Trust Funds vs. Litigation
Most people believe that if the company they worked for 40 years ago is bankrupt, they cannot recover any money. This is a myth. At Attorney 911, we navigate a “Dual Pathway” strategy for our Marion County clients:
- Asbestos Bankruptcy Trusts: More than 60 trusts exist today, holding approximately $30 billion in assets. These were created by companies like Johns-Manville, Owens Corning, and Pittsburgh Corning to pay victims outside of the court system. We identify every trust you qualify for and file claims to secure this money as quickly as possible.
- Civil Litigation: Many asbestos-using companies are still solvent and very much in business. We pursue traditional lawsuits against these manufacturers and premises owners to secure full compensatory and punitive damages.
As Beth B. noted in her review: “Ralph Manginello took his bogus case and had it dismissed within a WEEK! I have been trying to get that accomplished for over 2 years.” We apply that same speed and focus to your trust fund claims. The money in these trusts is finite, and payment percentages can drop as more claims are filed. Waiting even six months to file could cost your family tens of thousands of dollars.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 and speak with Ralph Manginello about your asbestos work history.
https://share.transistor.fm/s/bddc1426
Benzene and Industrial Chemical Exposure: Rewriting the Bone Marrow
While asbestos targets the lungs, benzene targets the blood. Benzene is a fundamental industrial chemical, a component of crude oil, and a byproduct of the refining processes that take place throughout East Texas. Workers in Marion County who spent time in regional refineries, worked as fuel transport drivers on Highway 59, or used industrial solvents in manufacturing have been at risk for decades.
How Benzene Causes Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)
Benzene is highly lipophilic, meaning it is easily absorbed through the skin and lungs and stored in fatty tissue—particularly your bone marrow. This is where hematopoiesis (blood cell production) occurs. Benzene itself isn’t the primary killer; it’s what your liver does to it. Your liver uses an enzyme called CYP2E1 to metabolize benzene into benzene oxide and muconaldehyde.
These metabolites are highly reactive. They enter the bone marrow and bind directly to the DNA of your hematopoietic stem cells. This binding causes specific chromosomal translocations—the “fingerprints” of benzene exposure. In litigation, we look for biomarkers like t(8;21) or del(5q) in your pathology reports. These translocations trigger a malignant transformation, leading to Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML), Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS), or Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has a Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) for benzene of 1 ppm over an 8-hour shift. However, science shows that benzene can cause leukemia even at levels below this limit. Many Marion County workers were exposed at levels 10 to 100 times higher than this, especially during “turnaround” seasons at regional plants.
https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.1028
The Refinery Danger Zones
You don’t have to work inside a refinery to be at risk. Benzene exposure occurs in:
- Refinery processes (catalytic reforming, hydrocracking).
- Tank cleaning and maintenance (where vapors are highly concentrated).
- Chemical manufacturing (styrene and cyclohexane production).
- Commercial painting and adhesives.
If you worked at facilities like the Eastman Chemical plant in Longview or any of the petroleum hubs near the Sabine River and have been diagnosed with a blood cancer, you may have a major claim. As Jess R. stated: “The process took about 2 months and last week I received a check. THANK YOU!!!!” While benzene cases often take longer than two months, we apply that same “911” urgency to your investigation.
Attorney Ralph Manginello explains case-value factors here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onBzdkIWadY
Axis 1 Extension: PFAS “Forever Chemicals” and Community Contamination
The drinking water in Marion County is a source of pride, especially for those living near the pristine beauty of Caddo Lake and Big Cypress Bayou. But across the country, and in parts of Texas, a new threat has emerged: PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances). These are synthetic chemicals used in non-stick coatings, waterproof fabrics, and specialized firefighting foams known as AFFF (Aqueous Film-Forming Foam).
Why They Are “Forever Chemicals”
PFAS molecules contain the carbon-fluorine bond—the strongest bond in organic chemistry. This means they do not break down in the environment and, crucially, they do not break down in your body. Instead, they “bioaccumulate,” building up in your blood serum, liver, and kidneys over years of low-dose exposure.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has recently established extraordinarily strict limits for PFAS in drinking water—down to 4 parts per TRILLION. This reflects a scientific consensus that there is no safe level of exposure. PFAS has been linked to:
- Kidney cancer and testicular cancer.
- Thyroid disease and ulcerative colitis.
- Pregnancy-induced hypertension (preeclampsia).
- Immune system suppression (reduced vaccine response).
If you lived near a facility that practiced with AFFF firefighting foam—such as a municipal airfield or industrial training site—or if your community water supply has tested positive for PFAS, you have legal rights. In 2023, 3M reached a $12.5 billion settlement over water contamination. The litigation is now shifting toward individual personal injury claims.
Learn more about the EPA’s PFAS Strategic Roadmap:
https://www.epa.gov/pfas/pfas-strategic-roadmap-epas-commitments-action-2021-2024
Axis 2: Dangerous Industries and Worker Injuries in Marion County
Marion County isn’t just a place of historical heritage; it’s a place of hard, often dangerous work. Workers in the timber, construction, and railway industries face acute physical hazards daily. When an injury happens on the job, the employer often tries to hide behind the workers’ compensation system. We’re here to tell you that in Texas, workers’ comp is only the beginning.
FELA: The Railroad Worker’s Shield
Railroad lines have run through Marion County since the 1870s. But railroad work is uniquely governed by the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA). Unlike normal workers’ comp, FELA allows injured railroaders to sue their employer for negligence.
If you were a conductor, engineer, or track worker for Union Pacific, BNSF, or any short-line railroad operating in Northeast Texas, and you were injured due to faulty equipment, unsafe walking conditions, or toxic exposures (like diesel exhaust or asbestos), you have the right to a jury trial. The “relaxed causation” standard of FELA means if the railroad’s negligence played any part in your injury—even the slightest—they are liable.
The Construction and Logging Risk
From timber harvesting in the Piney Woods to commercial development in Jefferson, construction and heavy equipment accidents are a reality. We handle:
- Trench Collapses: OSHA 29 CFR 1926.651 requires shoring or sloping for any trench deeper than five feet. A cubic yard of East Texas soil can weigh 3,000 pounds. Without protection, a collapse is almost always fatal.
- Scaffold and Ladder Falls: Gravity doesn’t negotiate. If a general contractor failed to provide fall protection, they are liable for your medical bills and lost wages.
- Electrocution: Construction sites near power lines require specific clearances. High-voltage contact causes internal tissue destruction that can lead to permanent disability or amputation.
As Christopher W. shared: “Ralph & the Manginello law firm attorneys did more (in less than 8 weeks!) on my car accident case than a previous attorney who had the case for OVER a year.” We bring that same East Texas speed to worker injury claims.
Call (888) 288-9911 for a free evaluation of your workplace injury.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZp4WV2fZ1k
The Multi-Claim Stack: How Bridge Content Multiplies Your Recovery
One of the biggest mistakes other law firms make is looking at your situation through a single lens. If you come to them with a railroad injury, they see a railroad case. If you come with mesothelioma, they see am asbestos case. At Attorney 911, we see the whole person. We often find that our clients in Marion County have “Stacked Claims.”
Scenario: The Marion County Utility or Railroad Worker
Consider a worker who spent 30 years with the railroad or a local utility. That worker may have:
- An Acute Injury Claim: A back injury from a fall on the job (FELA or personal injury).
- A Latent Exposure Claim: Mesothelioma or asbestosis from decades of handling asbestos-insulated pipes or brake shoes.
- Third-Party Product Liability: Claims against the manufacturers of the bad tools or the toxic chemicals that were used on the site.
By pursuing all three pathways simultaneously, we maximize the total compensation for the family. Most firms only pursue the easiest path. We pursue the path that gets you every dime you are legally owed.
As Racheal B. noted: “Melani Rodriguez (closing coordinator)… text me weekly with updates… I pessoalmente work for a personal injury law firm and know how busy they get… but NOT HERE.” You deserve that level of coordination when managing multiple claims.
For more information on the types of injuries covered under maritime and offshore law (Jones Act), see Ralph’s guide:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vd_HVPtPf4
Corporate Concealment: The History of Betrayal
The most heartbreaking part of our work is seeing the documents. When we litigate against companies like Johns-Manville, Monsanto, or 3M, we see the “smoking gun” memos.
- The Sumner Simpson Letters (1935): In the mid-1930s, the presidents of major asbestos companies wrote to each other, agreeing that “the less said about asbestos, the better off we are.” They chose to suppress medical research that proved asbestosis was real.
- The Monsanto Papers: Internal emails revealed that Monsanto ghostwrote studies to persuade the EPA that Roundup was safe, while their own scientists raised alarms internally.
- The 3M/DuPont Memos: Records show these companies knew PFAS was bioaccumulating in the blood of their own workers as early as the 1970s, yet they said nothing to the public for decades.
These companies were allowed to profit for half a century while people in Marion County were unknowingly being poisoned. That is why we pursue punitive damages. A settlement pays your medical bills, but a punitive jury verdict punishes the corporation for its deception.
Why Your Local Physician May Not Connect the Dots
If you go to a local clinic in Jefferson or a hospital in Marshall with a cough or fatigue, they will likely treat your symptoms. They may not ask you what you did for a living in 1978. Most general practitioners are not trained in occupational toxicology.
This is why we urge our clients to seek consultation from specialists who understand the link between work history and disease. In the Northeast Texas region, the UT Health system and regional cancer centers have specialized lung and blood clinics.
If you have been diagnosed, do not assume it was just a “random” illness. If you worked with your hands in East Texas between 1950 and 1990, there is a strong statistical probability that your disease was industry-caused.
For a free toxicological consultation, visit the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry:
https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/
Evidence Preservation: The Clock is Ticking
In Marion County, the industrial landscape is shifting. Old facilities are being torn down. Company records are being digitizing or shredded. Witnesses are retiring and moving away. Every day you wait to hire a lawyer is a day the evidence in your case degrades.
We move to preserve:
- Employment Records: Proving you were at the site in the years asbestos or benzene were present.
- Medical Records: Specifically the imaging (CT scans, X-rays) and pathology slides that show the physical presence of toxic fibers or specific leukemia biomarkers.
- Co-Worker Testimony: Identifying the men and women who worked alongside you and can testify to the dust levels and lack of safety equipment.
- Product Identification: Using purchase orders and historical catalogs to prove which specific brand of insulation or solvent was used at your plant.
“Leonor reached out to me and offered me her assistance… She took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders,” shared Stephanie H. in her review. Let us take the weight of the evidence gathering off your shoulders.
Check out our video on documenting evidence here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs
Frequently Asked Questions: Marion County Justice
1. I don’t remember exactly what products I was exposed to 40 years ago. Can I still file a claim?
Yes. We have access to massive industrial databases that contain the material inventories for thousands of job sites across Texas. If you tell us where you worked and when, we can often identify the specific products that were present at that time. We also use co-worker testimony to reconstruct the workplace conditions.
2. My spouse died from cancer three years ago. Is it too late to do anything?
In Texas, the statute of limitations for a wrongful death claim is generally two years from the date of death. However, there are “tolling” provisions and the “discovery rule” that may apply if you only recently learned that the death was related to a specific toxic exposure. Every case is unique—call us for a free evaluation of your timeline.
3. Will filing a lawsuit affect my Social Security or Medicare?
In most cases, a personal injury settlement is not considered taxable income, and it does not necessarily disqualify you from these benefits. However, Medicare “liens” are a reality. At Attorney 911, we have a specialized team that handles the negotiation of medical liens to ensure you keep the maximum amount of your settlement.
4. How much does a mesothelioma lawyer in Marion County cost?
We work on a contingency fee basis. This means we advance all the costs of the litigation—the thousands of dollars for expert witnesses, the records collection, the filing fees. If we do not win a settlement or verdict for you, you owe us nothing. There is zero financial risk to your family.
5. I worked at multiple refineries and rail yards. Which one do I sue?
In toxic torts, we use the “Substantial Factor” test. We typically name every company that contributed a significant amount to your total exposure. If you breathed asbestos fibers from five different products, all five manufacturers and potentially the site owners are liable.
6. Can I file a claim if I’m a veteran who was exposed to asbestos in the Navy?
Absolutely. Veterans have multiple paths. You can file for VA service-connected disability benefits AND you can file civil lawsuits/trust fund claims against the private companies that manufactured the asbestos products used on the ships. The VA cannot stop you from suing the company that poisoned you.
7. What is an “expedited” trial docket?
For clients with mesothelioma or other terminal diagnoses, we can file a motion for preferential trial setting. This forces the court to hear your case within a few months rather than years. We want you to see justice and financial security for your family in your lifetime.
8. I’m afraid of my former employer retaliating against my family members still working there.
There are strict whistleblower and anti-retaliation laws that protect families. Furthermore, many of these cases are brought against the manufacturers of the products, not just the direct employer. We keep your information confidential throughout the initial investigation.
9. How do I know if my leukemia was caused by benzene?
We look for specific medical clues. If your pathology reports show chromosomal abnormalities like those involving Chromosome 5 or 7, or specific translocations like t(8;21), these are scientifically accepted “fingerprints” of benzene exposure. We use world-class oncologists to review your records.
10. Does my immigration status matter in a toxic exposure case?
No. In the United States, every worker has equal rights under the law regardless of their immigration status. Your status cannot be used against you in a personal injury lawsuit in Texas. We at Attorney 911, and our associate Lupe Peña, are fluent in Spanish and serve our entire community with total confidentiality.
11. What is the difference between a lawsuit and a trust fund claim?
A lawsuit is filed in a court (like the Marion County District Court or the Federal Eastern District of Texas) and involves a judge and potentially a jury. A trust fund claim is an administrative process where we submit evidence to a bankruptcy trust for a fixed payout. You often qualify for both.
12. How long does a mesothelioma case take?
Trust fund claims can often be resolved in 6 to 12 months. Full-blown litigation against solvent defendants typically takes 12 to 24 months, though the terminal illness docket can speed this up.
13. My parent was a career mechanic in Jefferson. Could I have been exposed?
Yes. This is called “Secondary” or “Take-Home” exposure. When workers brought their dusty overalls home to be washed, their families inhaled the fibers. This has caused thousands of cases of mesothelioma in spouses and children. These are valid legal claims.
14. What are “Forever Chemicals”?
PFAS chemicals are called this because they don’t break down. If they are in your drinking water, they stay in your body. They have been linked to kidney and testicular cancer. If you have a rare cancer and live near an East Texas industrial zone, PFAS could be the culprit.
15. What if I can’t travel to a law office?
We are your legal emergency firm. We travel to our clients throughout Marion County. We can meet you at your home, in the hospital, or conduct consultations via Zoom. You should focus on your health; we will focus on the law.
16. What is the Manville Trust?
The Johns-Manville Corporation was once the largest asbestos company in the world. They established the first major bankruptcy trust in 1988. It has paid out billions to victims. It still accepts claims today, though the payment percentage is much lower than it once was. This is why you must act now.
17. Is Roundup still dangerous?
Yes. Despite what the product label might say, juries in multiple states have awarded billions of dollars because of the link between the glyphosate in Roundup and Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. If you used Roundup extensively as a landscaper or farmer, you should be evaluated.
18. Does smoking prevent me from winning an asbestos case?
No. While defendants will try to blame smoking, the science is clear: smoking does not cause mesothelioma. For lung cancer, asbestos and smoking have a “synergistic” effect, meaning the asbestos made the smoking-related risk 50 times worse. The asbestos company is still liable for the damage their product caused.
19. What is a “B-Reading”?
A B-Reading is a specialized interpretation of a chest X-ray by a NIOSH-certified radiologist. They are trained specifically to spot the scarring patterns caused by asbestos or silica. We ensure our clients receive these specialized reads for the strongest possible evidence.
20. Why do I need a lawyer for a trust fund claim?
The trust fund administrators are like insurance companies—they are looking for any reason to deny or reduce your claim. They require precise work history documentation and medical pathology. One mistake on a form can delay your money by years. We handle the bureaucracy so you don’t have to.
21. What happens if I lose my case?
Because we work on a contingency fee, if we are unsuccessful, you owe us nothing for our time or the thousands of dollars in expenses we advanced. We take on all the financial risk.
22. Can I sue for a family member who has already passed away?
Yes. Surviving spouses, children, and sometimes parents can file “Wrongful Death” and “Survival” actions. These compensate you for the loss of income, funeral expenses, and the emotional suffering of your loved one.
23. What is “Maintenance and Cure”?
This is an ancient maritime law principle that applies to seamen (including those on Marion County’s historical vessels). Your employer MUST pay for your daily living expenses (maintenance) and all medical care (cure) until you have reached maximum medical recovery, regardless of who was at fault.
24. What if my case was at a military base like Camp Lejeune?
The Camp Lejeune Justice Act of 2022 allows veterans and their families who lived on the base between 1953 and 1987 to sue the federal government for cancer caused by toxic water. This is a massive, ongoing litigation. You should check your eligibility immediately.
25. Who will actually be handling my case?
At many large “billboard” firms, you never talk to the lead attorney. At Attorney 911, Ralph Manginello is directly involved in the strategy of every case. You will have a team that knows you by name, and you will have Lupe Peña’s insider defense intelligence working for you.
Compensation: Securing Your Family’s Legacy
The value of a toxic exposure case in Northeast Texas depends on the severity of the diagnosis and the strength of the exposure link. We fight for:
- Medical Payouts: Covering 100% of past and future costs, including clinical trials and palliative care.
- Lost Wages: Replacing the income you would have earned for your family.
- Pain and Suffering: Quantifying the physical and emotional agony of a terminal diagnosis.
- Punitive Damages: Large-scale awards meant to punish corporate greed.
As Brian B. noted: “Whenever on hold, there’s no wasted elevator music… but quality information being presented… covering area from liability, compensation… I would unquestionably recommend this Firm to others.” We respect your intelligence and your time.
“They made me feel like family best Law Firm,” said Milyyy’ in her verified review. In Marion County, family comes first. When a corporation attacks one of ours, we respond with the full force of the law.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today. Your diagnosis was not an accident. Your recovery should not be one either. We are available 24/7 to address your legal emergency.
Principal Office: Houston, Texas.
Ralph Manginello and his team serve Marion County through federal court and state affiliations. Hablamos Español. No fee unless we win.
Call now: 1-888-ATTY-911.
https://attorney911.com/contact/