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Oil Field Injury attorney in Laredo Texas

Laredo Oil Field Injury Lawyer

Oil field work is dangerous. We represent workers injured in drilling accidents, explosions, and other oilfield incidents across Texas.

Laredo is the largest inland port in the United States and the busiest US-Mexico land crossing, where the World Trade Bridge and I-35 terminus generate some of the heaviest 18-wheeler traffic in Texas. Roughly 95 percent of Laredo residents are Hispanic and Spanish is the dominant language. Our attorneys handle Laredo injury claims in the Webb County District Courts.

We serve accident victims throughout Laredo, including Downtown Laredo, North Laredo, Del Mar, San Isidro, Mines Road corridor, South Laredo.

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Oil Field Injury Lawyer in Laredo, Texas

If you’ve been injured in an oil field injury incident in Laredo, you need an attorney who understands both the law and the local landscape. Medina & Medina represents clients throughout South Texas Border and is familiar with the Webb County court system. Our Laredo team offers free consultations and charges no fee unless we win your case.

Why Choose a Local Laredo Oil Field Injury Attorney?

  • Familiarity with Laredo courts, judges, and local legal procedures
  • Knowledge of dangerous corridors in Laredo, including I-35 (southern terminus) and US-59
  • Established relationships with trusted local medical providers and expert witnesses
  • Convenient access for in-person meetings at our office near Laredo

Medina & Medina combines local expertise with proven results across South Texas Border. We offer free consultations to every Laredo victim and charge no fee unless we win your case.

Compensation for Oil Field Injury Victims in Laredo

Texas Statute of Limitations

The Texas filing clock for most personal injury claims runs out at two years from the date of injury. Witnesses move, surveillance gets overwritten, and adjuster files harden long before that. Reach us early.

Oil Field Injury Cases in Laredo

Oil Field Injury cases in Laredo frequently arise along major corridors including I-35 (southern terminus), US-59, US-83, Loop 20 (Bob Bullock Loop), Mines Road (FM 1472), World Trade Bridge. Laredo is the largest inland port in the United States and the busiest US-Mexico land border crossing for commercial cargo

High-risk areas in Laredo include I-35 corridor and its southern terminus near the international bridges, Mines Road (FM 1472) commercial-truck corridor to the World Trade Bridge, Loop 20 (Bob Bullock Loop) around the city, US-59 and US-83 junctions, World Trade Bridge truck-staging and approach routes. If you have been injured near any of these locations, our attorneys can help.

  • Webb County recorded 885 commercial-vehicle-involved crashes in 2024 (TxDOT) more than Hidalgo County despite far fewer total crashes, reflecting Laredo's status as the nation's trucking gateway
  • Webb County recorded 6,740 traffic crashes in 2024, including 22 fatal crashes and 23 deaths, according to TxDOT crash data

Understanding Oil Field Injury Cases

Common Causes

In Laredo, oil field injury cases often trace back to conditions on I-35 (southern terminus) and near I-35 corridor and its southern terminus near the international bridges. Local drivers and pedestrians encounter these specific risks when navigating these corridors.

  • Well blowouts and uncontrolled pressure releases
  • Explosions from methane and other flammable gas accumulation
  • Heavy equipment failures on drilling rigs
  • Falls from derricks, platforms, and elevated rig components
  • Caught between injuries from pipe handling equipment
  • Transportation accidents on remote oilfield roads

Typical Injuries

Accident victims in Laredo are typically transported to trauma centers including Laredo Medical Center. The following injuries are common outcomes of these incidents.

  • Severe burns from well fires and explosions
  • Crush injuries from pipe and casing operations
  • Traumatic brain injuries from struck by incidents
  • Amputations caused by drilling and well servicing equipment
  • Hydrogen sulfide poisoning and respiratory damage
  • Wrongful death from catastrophic rig incidents

Establishing Liability

For oil field injury claims filed in Webb, liability often turns on evidence gathered from specific Laredo locations, including I-35 corridor and its southern terminus near the international bridges.

Oil field injury claims frequently involve multiple companies operating at the well site, including the operator, the drilling contractor, service companies, and equipment suppliers. Many oil field workers are classified as independent contractors but may have legal claims against site operators and other companies whose negligence caused the injury. Evidence of OSHA violations, inadequate safety meetings, missing well control procedures, and defective equipment establishes the liability of each responsible party.

Relevant Texas Law

Residents of Laredo pursue these claims under the same Texas statutes that govern all state personal injury actions.

Texas is one of the largest oil producing states, and the Texas Railroad Commission regulates drilling operations under Texas Natural Resources Code. Many oil field employers in Texas are nonsubscribers to workers compensation, exposing them to direct negligence suits under Texas Labor Code Section 406.033 without traditional employer defenses. OSHA general industry and construction standards apply to oilfield operations, and the Texas Workforce Commission enforces state specific workplace safety requirements.

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Local Resources and Courts in Laredo

Webb County Justice Center, 1110 Victoria St, Laredo, TX 78040

Personal injury civil cases arising in Laredo are filed in the Webb County District Courts at the Webb County Justice Center in downtown Laredo, the county seat.

Nearby Hospitals and Trauma Centers

  • Laredo Medical Center
  • Doctors Hospital of Laredo
  • Laredo Specialty Hospital
  • University Hospital (San Antonio, nearest Level I Trauma Center)

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Laredo Oil Field Injury Cases: How They Arise

Oil-field injuries in Texas concentrate in the Permian Basin (Midland, Odessa, Reeves County, Loving County) and the Eagle Ford Shale (south of San Antonio), with smaller volume in the Barnett Shale north of Fort Worth. The recurring injury patterns are dropped-object incidents on drilling rigs, blowouts and pressure-release events, hot-oil and chemical burns, falls from derricks, motor-vehicle collisions on lease roads, and crush injuries from equipment. Hydrogen sulfide exposure is a uniquely oil-field hazard that produces both acute toxic injury and long-term neurological sequelae.

The Injury Picture

Catastrophic injury is the typical pattern: traumatic brain injury, spinal-cord injury, amputation, severe burns, chemical inhalation injury, and wrongful death. The remote location of many well sites means initial trauma care is delayed, which affects outcomes. Survivors face long burn-unit and rehabilitation timelines.

The Liability Framework

Oil-field cases run on a multi-defendant chassis: operator, drilling contractor, service-company subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, and trucking carriers. Texas workers comp subscriber status is mixed across operators and contractors, with non-subscriber posture more common among smaller operators. Chapter 95 of the Civil Practice & Remedies Code is heavily litigated in cases against operators where independent-contractor work was being performed. The Texas Railroad Commission's regulatory regime supplies some of the safety standards, but federal OSHA and pipeline-safety regulations also apply.

Procedural Notes

Multi-defendant cases require careful preservation-of-evidence letters to every potential defendant within days of the incident; rig logs, drilling records, and equipment-inspection records have short retention windows in some companies.

Our Reach in Webb County

Our attorneys handle personal injury claims arising in Laredo and filed in the Webb County District Courts at the Webb County Justice Center, with particular focus on the commercial-truck collisions the I-35 / World Trade Bridge corridor generates.

The Local Jury

Webb County juries are overwhelmingly Hispanic and Spanish-dominant, and the venue has a strong working-family character; jurors live with daily cargo-truck traffic, which informs how they weigh 18-wheeler and trucking-company liability, and proceedings routinely involve bilingual testimony.

Frequently Asked Questions in Laredo

The order of operations is medical care, then evidence, then counsel. A trauma evaluation at Laredo Medical Center or a comparable Laredo facility creates the contemporaneous record that supports a future claim, especially when the injury is something like Severe burns from well fires and explosions that can be missed on a roadside check. Once you are stable, photograph everything you can and write down what you remember while the details are fresh. Insurance adjusters will call quickly. A short call with a lawyer before that conversation almost always changes the trajectory of the case.

The Webb district courts have civil jurisdiction over personal injury actions, and the case would most likely be filed at Webb County Justice Center, 1110 Victoria St, Laredo, TX 78040. From filing through trial, our firm runs cases in front of these judges on a regular basis. That continuity matters when it comes to scheduling, evidentiary rulings, and the timing of settlement negotiations.

Patients with serious injuries in Laredo are typically routed to Laredo Medical Center, Doctors Hospital of Laredo, and Laredo Specialty Hospital, depending on the nature of the trauma and the time of day. Severe burns from well fires and explosions, Crush injuries from pipe and casing operations, and Traumatic brain injuries from struck by incidents are among the diagnoses these facilities see most often in cases like this one. The hospital you start at also shapes the paper trail, so when there is a choice, it is worth knowing which centers carry the specialty teams that match the injury.

The general rule is two years from the date of the injury, under Section 16.003 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. The clock can run on a different schedule when the claimant is a minor, when the injury was not reasonably discoverable until later, or when a government entity is involved, where notice deadlines can fall as early as six months. The cleanest way to know exactly where the clock stands in your case is a short call with a lawyer who can look at the dates.

In Laredo, these cases frequently arise along I-35 (southern terminus) and at high-risk locations such as I-35 corridor and its southern terminus near the international bridges. A recurring cause we see is Well blowouts and uncontrolled pressure releases, which we investigate through police reports, eyewitness accounts, and available video footage.

A local attorney in Laredo brings knowledge of Webb, the bench at Webb County Justice Center, 1110 Victoria St, Laredo, TX 78040, and the specific neighborhoods where our clients live, including Downtown Laredo, North Laredo, and Del Mar. That local grounding helps with venue strategy, witness interviews, and communication with juries who reflect the community.

Get a Free Laredo Oil Field Injury Case Review

Evidence fades. Witnesses move. Adjusters lock in their position. Our Laredo oil field injury attorneys will review your case at no cost, and you owe us nothing unless we recover.