Texas Silicosis Claims Found to be Fraudulent Now Subject of Federal Grand Jury and Congressional Investigations

Words: Dan KesterEarlier this summer, a Texas Federal Judge, Janis Graham Jack, in a scathing 249 page opinion, publicly excoriated approximately 10,000 silicosis claims brought before her court in a class action lawsuit against some 250 companies. Judge Jack not only condemned the silicosis claims, but she documented the fraudulent means by which the lawyers, doctors and screening companies had manufactured them.

While reviewing the evidence in this case, Judge Jack discovered that of the more than 9,000 plaintiffs who supplied information about their "disease," 99 percent of the claimants had been diagnosed with silicosis by the same 9 doctors. These doctors had been "retained" by law firms or "screening companies" that do mass X-rays on behalf of law firms searching for plaintiffs. The law firm in question in this case is now the subject of a federal grand jury investigation in New York.

According to The Wall Street Journal (which has been providing excellent coverage of this case), when the physicians were deposed, they all but admitted they took their orders from the lawyers and screening firms. Apparently many of the doctors never even saw their "patients." Instead, the doctors signed blank forms for the screening company and let secretaries fill out the diagnoses. It has also been reported that some of the doctors were, magically enough, able to perform 1,239 diagnostic evaluations in 72 hours or less than 4 minutes for each evaluation.

But even more troubling is the fact that more than 65 percent of the silica plaintiffs who filed in this particular case had already been plaintiffs in an asbestos suit. It is a well known fact that it is clinically impossible to contract both asbestosis and silicosis. Yet, some of the physicians associated with these screening companies have received nearly $5 million for their silicosis diagnoses.

Fortunately, Congressman Joe Barton, Chairman of the powerful House Committee on Energy and Commerce (who happens to be from Texas) and Congressman Ed Whitfield of Kentucky have begun a Congressional investigation into the people and firms responsible for recruiting and {falsely} diagnosing claims of silicosis. Mr. Whitfield, who chairs the House Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee, has been demanding records and information related to the diagnoses and practices of the doctors involved in the Texas lawsuit.

Let us hope that the House investigation can get to the bottom of the silicosis racket before OSHA is allowed to move forward with a federal standard addressing employee exposures. If claims for silicosis are being orchestrated to support studies which may ultimately be used as the basis for a future silica standard, let us hope that this Congressional investigation will help forestall federal regulatory action until we have all the facts before us. It would indeed be tragic to repeat the misfortunes of the asbestos companies and end up with bankruptcies throughout the construction industry because we failed to answer all the right questions.

About: Legislative
The New Equation for Masonry Profit: Predictable Hardware and Proven Data
July 2026

The masonry industry is built on tradition, but modern growth requires a shift from guesswork to absolute certainty. When we talk about the philosophy that you cannot improve what you do not measure, we are looking at the literal minutes and manpower lost

The Walls We Build
July 2026

As masons, we spend our careers building walls. We build them with brick, block, stone, and mortar, and we take pride in making them straight, strong, and built to last. But over the years, I’ve learned there is another kind of wall we build—the walls we

Owen Heimbach
July 2026

This month, the MCAA had the pleasure of speaking with SkillsUSA First Place Winner Owen Heimbach, a young mason just starting out whose enthusiasm for bricklaying is truly contagious. His passion for the craft was evident throughout our interview.

Backfill Your Foundation
July 2026

I’ve been noticing an uptick in a very specific kind of application lately, and once you see the pattern, you can’t unsee it. The résumé usually reads like a family photo album. “Started helping my dad when I was 15.” “Worked summers, then full time.” “R