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Your Guide to Sponsoring Family Members

When a person migrates to the United States, they leave behind family members, whether it’s their spouses, their children, or their parents, or any extended relatives that they want to bring into the United States for them to have either in unity with their families so that they can all be together and be one, Read More

Your Path from Asylum to a Green Card

If you applied for asylum within the one year of you entering the country and you were granted asylum in the United States, after one year and one day of staying in that asylum status, you will be eligible for adjustment of status or an easier way to understand your green card. And that will Read More

How to Qualify for Asylum

If you have come to the United States from a country where you were harmed, or you feared being harmed in the future, you may be eligible for asylum. This harm must be connected to either your race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or your political opinion. If you feel that you Read More

It’s Not Over! Your Guide to An Order for Removal

Did you lose your immigration case? Were you ordered removed? Are you in front of the Board of Immigration Appeals doing an appeal at this point in time? There may still be an option to take a prosecutorial discretion with the government and get their backing in hopefully dismissing or terminating your case before the Read More

Don’t Fear the Notice to Appear

Did you receive a letter that says notice to appear on the side? Did it have charges of removability? Do you know what any of that means? I didn’t think so. What that means is the government is trying to put you in deportation proceedings and wants to take you out of this country. But Read More

Your Guide to Prosecutorial Discretion

Are you in deportation proceedings? If you are, then you probably heard the terms prosecutorial discretion. What does that mean? What that means is the Department of Homeland Security has the discretion or the power to decide if they want to either terminate, meaning dismiss your case and take you completely out of deportation proceedings Read More

Navigating “Keeping the Family Together” After Your Spouse Dies

The Keeping Families Together program requires you to be married to a U.S. citizen. However, if your U.S. citizen spouse is deceased, you may still be eligible to take part in this program. Please seek the guidance of an immigration attorney prior to making your applications