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Missouri City & Sugar Land Personal Injury Lawyer > Fulshear Explosion Injury Lawyer

Fulshear Explosion Injury Lawyer

Explosion injuries are among the most violent and medically complex injuries that exist. Burns, blast trauma, shrapnel wounds, lung damage, hearing loss, and traumatic brain injuries can all result from a single event, and the consequences often unfold over months or years of treatment. When an explosion occurs because of someone else’s negligence, whether a property owner, a manufacturer, an employer, or a contractor, the injured person deserves legal representation that genuinely understands the weight of what they are dealing with. At Henrietta Ezeoke Law Firm, we have spent more than 20 years representing seriously injured people across the greater Houston area, including Fulshear and the surrounding Fort Bend County communities. If you are recovering from an explosion or a family lost someone to a blast-related incident, a Fulshear explosion injury lawyer from our firm will take your case seriously from the first conversation.

Why Explosions in Fulshear and Fort Bend County Carry Particular Legal Complexity

Fulshear has grown rapidly over the past decade, bringing with it active construction, expanding industrial infrastructure, and increased commercial activity along FM 1093 and the broader Katy-Fulshear corridor. That growth matters in explosion injury cases because it creates a layered web of contractors, subcontractors, property developers, equipment suppliers, and chemical handlers operating in close proximity to residential neighborhoods. When an explosion happens at a worksite, a storage facility, a pipeline, or even a residential property where gas lines or HVAC systems were improperly installed, identifying the responsible party is rarely as simple as it looks at first.

Beyond construction, Fort Bend County sits within the broader Gulf Coast industrial region. Residents and workers in Fulshear sometimes commute to or interact with petrochemical plants, refineries, and natural gas operations that carry genuine explosion risk. Texas has a long history of industrial blast incidents, and the legal frameworks governing them are not the same as those governing a routine car accident. Federal regulations from OSHA, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, and the EPA often intersect with state negligence law. Building and fire codes, product liability statutes, and premises liability principles may all apply to the same event.

The Range of Damages That Explosion Injuries Actually Produce

One reason explosion cases demand experienced legal handling is that the full scope of damages is rarely visible in the first weeks after the event. Initial medical records capture acute trauma, but long-term consequences take time to materialize and document.

  • Severe burn injuries often require multiple surgeries, skin grafts, and years of reconstructive treatment with permanent scarring and functional limitations.
  • Primary blast lung injury, caused by pressure waves from an explosion, may not appear on standard imaging and is frequently underdiagnosed in emergency settings.
  • Traumatic brain injury from blast concussive force can produce cognitive and behavioral changes that only become apparent after the victim returns to work or daily routines.
  • Hearing loss and tinnitus from explosion overpressure are often permanent and affect quality of life and earning capacity in ways that are genuinely difficult to reverse.
  • Chemical exposure from the burning of industrial materials can lead to respiratory illness, toxic injury, or cancer with timelines extending years beyond the explosion itself.

An insurer representing the responsible party will typically work from the medical records available at the time of any settlement discussion. That is why rushing to resolve an explosion injury claim before the full picture of damages is established can permanently undercut the compensation a victim actually needs. Our firm evaluates these claims with attention to the long arc of recovery, not just what is documented in the immediate aftermath.

Who Bears Legal Responsibility After a Blast Incident

Explosion cases almost always involve more than one potentially liable party, and building the right legal theory depends on what caused the event and where it happened. A gas leak ignition inside a commercial property may point toward the property owner, a utility contractor, or a manufacturer of faulty equipment, or all three. An industrial blast at a facility may involve the employer, a third-party equipment vendor, a chemical supplier, or an engineering firm that approved unsafe conditions. A residential explosion may stem from faulty appliance installation or construction defects in a recently built home.

Texas law allows injured parties to pursue claims against multiple defendants simultaneously, and courts apply proportional fault rules that can affect how damages are ultimately allocated. That structure matters because defendants in explosion cases frequently point fingers at each other, and a well-built case needs to anticipate that dynamic. Henrietta Ezeoke has handled serious injury claims throughout Texas for over two decades and understands how to build cases that account for multi-party liability rather than accepting the first and simplest explanation of what happened.

In workplace explosions specifically, the path to full compensation is more complicated than a standard premises liability case. Texas does not require private employers to carry workers’ compensation insurance, so some injured workers are not covered by it. Even when workers’ compensation applies, it does not bar claims against third parties whose negligence contributed to the incident. Identifying those third-party avenues is often where recovery is actually maximized.

What Explosion Injury Victims and Their Families Ask Most

How long do I have to bring an explosion injury claim in Texas?

The general statute of limitations for personal injury in Texas is two years from the date of injury. Wrongful death claims follow the same two-year timeline from the date of death. Some exceptions exist, particularly when injuries are discovered after the fact, but waiting creates real problems. Evidence disappears, witnesses become harder to locate, and the scene is often altered or destroyed. Starting the legal process promptly protects the integrity of the claim.

What if the explosion happened while I was at work?

It depends on whether your employer subscribes to Texas workers’ compensation and who else may have contributed to the incident. If a third party, such as an equipment manufacturer or a contractor on the site, bears some fault, you may have a separate claim against them regardless of workers’ compensation coverage. These cases require careful analysis because the legal paths are not always obvious and they interact with each other in ways that affect total recovery.

Can I bring a wrongful death claim after losing a family member in an explosion?

Yes. In Texas, certain family members, including spouses, children, and parents of the deceased, have the right to pursue wrongful death claims. The estate may also have a survival claim for damages the deceased experienced prior to death. Explosion-related wrongful death cases are serious and typically involve substantial contested liability. Our firm handles these claims with the care and thoroughness they require.

What kind of evidence matters in an explosion injury case?

Physical evidence from the scene, inspection records, maintenance logs, safety audits, equipment manuals, witness accounts, and regulatory compliance history all matter. Expert testimony from fire investigators, engineers, and medical professionals is frequently necessary to establish both what caused the explosion and what the full extent of injuries means for the victim’s future. Evidence at the scene should be preserved as quickly as possible, which is one more reason early legal involvement is valuable.

Does it matter if I was partly at fault for the explosion?

Texas follows a modified comparative fault rule. A plaintiff who is found to be 50 percent or more at fault cannot recover damages. Below that threshold, recovery is reduced proportionally by the plaintiff’s percentage of fault. This is why defendants in explosion cases often attempt to attribute fault to the injured party. Having legal representation that anticipates and counters that strategy directly affects the outcome.

How are explosion injury settlements determined?

Settlement value in an explosion case depends on the nature and severity of injuries, the clarity of liability, the degree of permanent impairment, lost income and future earning capacity, ongoing medical costs, and non-economic damages such as pain and suffering and loss of enjoyment of life. Insurance companies calculate these figures with their own interests in mind. An attorney who has spent years evaluating and litigating serious injury claims can offer a grounded assessment of what a case is actually worth and push back when insurers undervalue it.

Does your firm handle cases on a contingency fee basis?

Yes. Our firm operates on a no-recovery, no-fee basis. You do not pay legal fees unless we recover compensation on your behalf. That structure means our interests are aligned with yours, and you can pursue your claim without worrying about upfront legal costs during an already difficult period.

Reaching an Explosion Injury Attorney Who Serves Fulshear

The recovery process after a serious blast incident is hard enough without trying to navigate a complicated legal claim at the same time. Henrietta Ezeoke Law Firm represents clients in Fulshear, Sugar Land, Missouri City, Pearland, Stafford, and the surrounding Fort Bend County and Houston communities. Our practice is built on direct attorney involvement, honest communication, and thorough case preparation. If you are looking for a Fulshear explosion injury attorney who will evaluate your situation carefully and tell you exactly where things stand, contact our firm today for a free consultation.

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