Brazos County Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure Trial Attorneys Attorney 911 Our 27 Plus Years Defeating Corporate Defendants Who Concealed Toxic Dangers Like Johns-Manville 3M and Monsanto Multi-Million Dollar Verdicts Between $5M and $250M Plus Accessing $30 Billion in Active Asbestos Trust Funds Former Insurance Defense Insider Lupe Pena Knows Their Denial Playbooks for Benzene AML Leukemia at 1 PPM PFAS Forever Chemicals Camp Lejeune Water and Roundup Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Claims Representing Brazos County Workers in Dangerous Industries Including Maritime Jones Act FELA Railroad Refinery Explosions 2.1B BP Litigation Success Construction Falls Crane Collapses and Trench Cave-Ins We Fight for Maximum Compensation for Catastrophic Illness and Wrongful Death Using 11 Simultaneous Legal Pathways Free Initial Consultation No Fee Unless We Win Call 1-888-ATTY-911
For Every Worker Who Built Brazos County: You Deserve the Truth About Toxic Exposure You didn't know. For twenty years, thirty years, maybe longer—you went to work in Bryan, showed up at the job site in College Station, or maintained the rail lines crossing Brazos County. You did your job and you came home to your family. Nobody told you the dust you breathed, the chemicals you handled, or the insulation you cut would one day try to kill you. Now you know. And now you have rights. The cough may have started six months ago. Then the shortness of breath. Then the doctor said a word you’d only heard on television: mesothelioma. Or perhaps it was a diagnosis of Acute Myeloid Leukemia after years of handling solvents, or a sudden respiratory failure following a lifetime in the trades. When that happens, everything you thought you knew about your years at the manufacturing plants, the Texas A&M maintenance bays, or the Union Pacific railyards in Brazos County changes forever. At Attorney 911, led by Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña, we believe there is a word for what happened to you. It is not bad luck. It is not "just a part of getting older." It is not genetics. It is exposure. For decades, corporations across Texas and the United States knew that the substances their employees handled were lethal. They had the studies. They had the data. They had the warnings from their own scientists—and they suppressed it all to…