
Practice 01 — Immigration
Your U.S. immigration journey begins with the right counsel.
Immigration law is complex and constantly changing. Applying for citizenship, being detained by officials, or facing deportation is not something to handle without experienced and knowledgeable legal counsel. You need a lawyer who will skillfully navigate you through the process while zealously fighting for your rights.
Whether you are in the application process or a loved one is facing deportation, you need to take immediate action and even the odds you face.
Areas of Representation
Six pathways. One firm.
01
Family-Based Immigration
Spousal petitions, fiancé(e) visas, adjustment of status, and consular processing for U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents.
02
Green Cards & Permanent Residency
Adjustment of status, removal of conditions, marriage-based petitions, and complex residency reinstatement matters.
03
Citizenship & Naturalization
N-400 representation, dual-citizenship advisory, and complex naturalization cases involving travel or residency challenges.
04
Deportation Defense
Removal proceedings before EOIR, cancellation of removal, withholding, and federal appeals to the Third Circuit.
05
Asylum & Humanitarian Relief
Affirmative and defensive asylum, TPS, U-Visas, T-Visas, VAWA, and special immigrant juvenile status.
06
Waivers
I-601 and I-601A hardship waivers, fraud waivers, criminal waivers, and unlawful presence bar relief.
Process
How we work, step by step.
Consultation
A private session to understand your story, timeline, and stakes. Times vary.
Strategy
A roadmap with timelines, document checklists, and risk assessments.
Filing
Meticulous preparation and submission of every case, with adversarial scenarios pre-modeled.
Outcome
Continuous status updates, USCIS and consular advocacy, removal defense, and lasting attorney-client relationship.
Resource
Facing removal proceedings in Newark?
Our practical guide covers what to expect at the EOIR Newark Immigration Court — security procedures, hearing types, what to bring, and how to prepare.
Read the Newark Court GuideSpeak with our team
