Toxic Mold Injury Lawyer in Denver, CO
Sick from toxic mold in your Denver rental, home, or workplace? Lionheart Injury Law holds negligent landlords accountable and wins full compensation for mold injuries.
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What Can You Recover in a Denver Mold Injury Case?
Most serious toxic mold cases we take resolve between $200,000 and $3 million, and lifelong respiratory harm pushes it higher. Mold damages are cumulative: medical care, relocation, remediation, and ruined belongings all count, and they add up fast.
Bigger and faster settlements come from trial preparation that starts the day you sign, and from a firm that, so far, has never lost.
With us, you speak directly with your attorney, and our RN Medical Director manages your medical care from day one, insurance or no insurance. There's no fee unless we win. Contact us now for a free consultation.
Why Toxic Mold Cases Are Different
Mold is a living contamination that grows wherever water meets organic material, and it hides: behind drywall, under flooring, above ceiling tiles, inside HVAC ducts, behind the appliances nobody moves. There are tens of thousands of mold species; the dangerous ones, including the infamous black mold (Stachybotrys), release spores and mycotoxins that people breathe for months before anyone finds the colony. That is what makes these cases different: the injury builds invisibly, the evidence sits inside someone else's walls, and the defendant usually knew about the water problem long before you knew about the mold. The first sign is often a musty odor, a water stain, or a family that cannot stop getting sick in one particular home.
Colorado law is on your side here. The warranty of habitability (C.R.S. § 38-12-503) expressly makes a rental uninhabitable when it has mold associated with dampness. This is not a vague negligence theory; it is a statute with the landlord's name on it.
How Toxic Mold Makes You Sick
Respiratory illness leads the list: chronic coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath, and asthma that appears or sharply worsens after moving in. Allergic reactions follow: congestion, sinus infections on repeat, watery eyes, skin rashes. Prolonged exposure to mycotoxins is associated with headaches, fatigue, nausea, and difficulty concentrating, the kind of symptoms doctors chase for months before anyone thinks to ask about the apartment. For vulnerable people the stakes rise fast: children can develop lifelong asthma, and immunocompromised residents face serious fungal infections such as aspergillosis. A telltale pattern we see in almost every case: the symptoms improve when you leave the home and return when you do. Write that pattern down; it is evidence.
Who Is Liable for Mold Exposure in Denver
Landlords and property managers are the most common defendants: Colorado's habitability statute requires them to address mold and the dampness feeding it within days of written notice, following a defined remediation process. Ignoring the leak, painting over the colony, or spraying bleach on drywall and calling it fixed is negligence, and retaliating against a tenant who complains is separately unlawful. Beyond rentals: hotels owe guests safe rooms (a claim that runs like our hotel injury playbook cases), HOAs and management companies answer for common-element water intrusion in condos, builders and contractors answer for construction defects and botched plumbing that trapped water inside new walls, and employers' landlords and building owners can be liable when a moldy workplace makes staff sick. Toxic exposure inside rental housing has a sibling on this site: the same neglected buildings that grow mold are the ones with the failing furnaces on our carbon monoxide poisoning playbook.
Mold cases are premises cases at their core; the notice-and-duty framework of our slip and fall overview anchors them.
Where Mold Grows in Denver Housing
Colorado is dry, and landlords lean on that fact to dismiss complaints. But mold does not need a humid climate; it needs water, and Denver housing supplies it: basement and garden-level apartments in Capitol Hill and Wash Park era buildings, swamp coolers pushing moisture through ducts all summer, flat and low-slope roofs that pond spring snowmelt, sixty-year-old plumbing behind sixty-year-old tile, and sprinkler overspray soaking foundations. In the older apartment stock along Colfax and across the city's northwest, deferred maintenance does the rest. Denver's Department of Public Health and Environment takes housing complaints and its inspection records, along with your 311 reports, become evidence of exactly when the landlord knew.
How We Build a Denver Mold Injury Case
Test before the cleanup. A licensed industrial hygienist performs air-quality and spore sampling that identifies the species and concentration; once remediation starts, that evidence is gone forever, so we move immediately and send a preservation demand. We assemble the notice record (your written complaints, texts with the manager, maintenance tickets, prior tenants' complaints, city inspection files), document the moisture source before it is repaired, and preserve contaminated belongings rather than letting them disappear in a dumpster. On the medical side, we connect your treating physicians with the environmental results, because the defense in every mold case is the same: it is just allergies, it was preexisting, it could have come from anywhere. The testing plus the symptom timeline answers all three.
Damages, Deadlines, and Whether Your Case Goes to Trial
Your claim reaches medical care and future treatment, lost wages, relocation and temporary housing costs, destroyed belongings, and the human toll: months of unexplained illness, a child's new asthma diagnosis, a home you were afraid to breathe in. Non-economic damages run under HB24-1472's $1.5 million cap; permanent respiratory impairment sits outside it. The deadline is generally two years (C.R.S. § 13-80-102), but the evidence clock is measured in days, not years. Venue for Denver cases is Denver District Court, in front of jurors who rent, who have dealt with Denver landlords, and who understand exactly how a maintenance request goes unanswered. Insurers pay these cases when the testing, the notice record, and the medicine line up; if trial is what it takes, we are ready.
Talk to a Denver Toxic Mold Lawyer
If a landlord's neglect made your home unsafe to breathe in, you have rights. Free consultation, no fee unless we win.
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