Background
Laurel was born in heavily Hispanic and Democratic Laredo in south Texas.
Laurel was born in heavily Hispanic and Democratic Laredo in south Texas.
He graduated in 1937 from Martin High School. Laurel thereafter graduated from the Roman Catholic-affiliated Loyola University in New Orleans.
Vidal M. Treviño, late superintendent of the Laredo Independent School District, called Laurel "the best orator we have ever had." Laurel was one of five Laredoans to have served as president of the Hispanic interest group, the League of United Latin American Citizens, having been president of the organization for 1955–1956. He then entered the United States Army Air Corps, in which he served from 1941 to 1945. After military service in World World War II, Laurel enrolled in a pre-law curriculum at the University of Texas at Austin.
He then completed his legal studies at the South Texas College of Law in Houston.
He opened his law practice in Laredo in 1948. Laurel launched his own political career in 1956, with election to the Texas House of Representatives, where he served two terms from the 80th District.
He joined Kika de la Garza of Hidalgo County as the only two Hispanics in the Texas House from 1957 to 1959. In the House, Laurel also opposed a bill that would have made the mind-altering drug peyote an "unlawful dangerous substance".
In 1960, rather than seeking a third term in the legislature, Laurel was elected district attorney of Webb, Zapata, and Dimmit counties.
He had already been a special investigator for the District Attorney"s office from 1952-1956. He was reelected in 1964 but left the position in 1967, when he accepted an appointment from United States. President Lyndon B. Johnson to the National Transportation Safety Board. Laurel remained on the board through 1972, under Johnson"s successor, Richard M. Nixon.
In 1973, Laurel was named executive director of the International Good Neighbor Council, a non-profit organization founded in 1954 to promote goodwill and friendship between the United States and Mexico.
The main council office is in Monterrey, Mexico. Laurel headed the organization until 1975.
Thereafter, he was the president of the council. Laurel was also a rancher and a banker.
He was affiliated with Rotary International and the Optimist Club, which he headed in Laredo from 1977 to 1978.
Laurel died of a lingering illness at a Laredo hospital. He is honored with his bust in the lobby of the Webb County Courthouse in Laredo, along with that of a subsequent district attorney, Charles Robert Borchers, who served from 1973 to 1980.
He was also a former member of the National Advisory Council on Rural Poverty. He was a member of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.