Frisco Wrongful Death Lawyers: Civil Justice After a Teen’s Murder Conviction, Attorney911 Files Suit in Collin County and Holds Frisco ISD Accountable Under the Texas Tort Claims Act (6-Month Notice Deadline), Traces $633,908 in GiveSendGo Donations and the Angelic Obsessions LLC Activated 24 Days After the Stabbing Under UFTA § 24.005, Punitive Damages Uncapped Under § 41.008(c)(2) for Intentional Felonies — Ralph Manginello (27+ Years Federal-Court Trial Experience) and Lupe Peña (Former Insurance-Defense Attorney), Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, Hablamos Español, 1-888-ATTY-911
When the Verdict Comes Back Guilty and the Fight Is Still Beginning The conviction felt like the end of something. It was not. If you are the parent of a Texas teenager whose child was taken from you by an intentional act — and the person responsible has been convicted and sentenced — you have probably heard a hundred well-meaning voices tell you that justice was done. Maybe you believe them. Maybe you are too tired to decide what you believe. Either way, what we want you to know, in the clearest possible terms, is this: a criminal conviction is one track of accountability. It is not the only one. The civil justice system in Texas is a separate, parallel process with its own causes of action, its own deadlines, its own remedies, and its own capacity to reach assets the criminal court could not touch. Some of those deadlines — including one that may have already run on your case — cannot be paused while you grieve. This page is written for the family that just watched a murderer convicted and walked out of a Collin County courtroom with a 35-year sentence wondering what comes next. It is also…