Asbestos Exposure in Louisiana — Your Case Doesn’t Require You to Remember Every Detail
You worked in Louisiana. Maybe at one site, maybe at a dozen across a thirty-year career. You may not remember every product name, every contractor, every supervisor. You don’t need to. An experienced asbestos attorney has the records to fill in what you can’t.
Asbestos litigation has been an active practice area for more than four decades. In that time, attorneys who handle these cases have built nationwide libraries of evidence — not state-by-state limitations. The firm evaluating your case in Louisiana can pull from:
- Contractor and union records identifying which crews insulated which facilities, going back to the 1940s
- Manufacturer specification documents listing which asbestos products were used at which jobsites
- Social Security earnings records confirming employment dates and employers
- OSHA, EPA, and state air-monitoring data documenting fiber concentrations at named facilities
- Bankruptcy trust filings naming individual workers and their exposures
- Corporate successor records tracking liability for defunct asbestos-product manufacturers
Why It Costs You Nothing
Asbestos cases are paid on contingency. The attorney is paid only if money is recovered for you. That alignment means the firm has every reason to do the work that builds a complete picture, and every reason to take your call even before you can list every detail. There is no upfront fee. No hourly billing. No charge for the investigation that follows your free consultation.
Why Time Matters
Statutes of limitations vary by state — typically one to five years from the date of diagnosis. In every state, the clock starts at diagnosis, not at exposure. That clock does not pause. If you or a family member has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer, the time to call is now — even if you’re still gathering details, even if you’re not sure whether you have a case.
What Happens on the Call
- You describe what you remember — trades, years, employers, anywhere from one jobsite to thirty
- The attorney asks targeted questions to identify likely defendants and exposure pathways
- If your situation has legal merit, the firm explains the next step — usually ordering records
- You decide whether to retain them. No pressure, no obligation, no charge for the consultation
The form below routes directly to O'Brien Law Firm. Your details are not sold or shared with other firms.
Louisiana Asbestos Exposure Sites
Avondale Shipyards in Westwego, Louisiana — acquired by Huntington Ingalls in 2010 — was one of the largest commercial shipbuilders on the Gulf Coast. Shipfitters, pipefitters, and insulators at Avondale built cargo ships and naval vessels surrounded by asbestos pipe insulation, boiler lagging, and gaskets. Avondale asbestos litigation has generated tens of thousands of claims.
Louisiana’s petrochemical corridor — the stretch of the Mississippi River between New Orleans and Baton Rouge known as ‘Cancer Alley’ — includes facilities operated by ExxonMobil, Dow Chemical, Shell, Motiva, and BASF where pipefitters, insulators, and boilermakers worked with asbestos-containing products through the 1970s. Louisiana’s 1-year statute of limitations is one of the shortest in the country — prompt action is essential.
Louisiana filing deadline: 1yr from the date of diagnosis. Contact an attorney immediately to protect your rights — the clock does not pause.
For informational purposes only. Not legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is created by reading this page. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.
Connect With an Asbestos & Mesothelioma Attorney for Louisiana
Worked or lived in Louisiana? A diagnosis of mesothelioma or an asbestos-related illness may mean you and your family have a legal claim. An experienced attorney can evaluate your case — at no cost to you.
- Free case evaluation — no obligation to hire
- No attorney fee unless we make a financial recovery
- Statutes of limitations may limit the time you have to act
- Trust fund claims, civil lawsuits, and VA benefits pursued simultaneously