Odessa College Construction Fatality & Wrongful Death Attorneys — Attorney911 Brings Ralph Manginello’s 27+ Years of Federal-Court Trial Practice to the Midland-Odessa Permian Basin, We Pursue the General Contractor of Record and the Premises Owner for the Jobsite Safety Failures Behind a Subcontractor’s Death on a Controlled Construction Site, We Demand the OSHA Investigation File, Site Safety Plans and Surveillance Footage Before the Overwrite Cycle Erases Them, Texas Non-Subscriber Law Strips the Employer’s Defenses When Workers’ Comp Coverage Is Missing, Lupe Peña the Former Insurance-Defense Insider Who Knows How the Claims Machine Values and Denies Construction Death Cases, the Firm Has Recovered Millions in Wrongful-Death Cases and $50M+ for Injury Victims, the Governmental-Entity Notice Clock Is Short and May Already Be Running — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, Hablamos Español, 1-888-ATTY-911
Odessa Construction Fatality: Your Family’s Legal Rights After a Subcontractor Death at the Odessa College Site Someone you love went to work at a construction site in Odessa on a Tuesday in June and did not come home. You are reading this at a hour when no one should have to be awake, trying to understand what happened and what you are supposed to do next. We are going to tell you everything we know about the legal landscape your family is now standing in — not to pressure you, but because the decisions made in the first days after a construction death are the ones that decide whether the truth comes out or disappears under the dust of a job site that is already being cleaned up. A subcontractor was killed on June 23 at the Odessa College construction project. Cerris Builders is the general contractor of record. Odessa College and Cerris Builders issued a joint statement. The site was secured. Work was suspended in the affected area. OSHA is investigating. No details about the mechanism of death, the identity of the deceased, or the subcontractor’s employer have been released. That is where the public record stops — and…