Get Help With Your Immigration Case
Tell us what is happening. Our team will review your inquiry and help you take the next step.
If you received an immigration notice, have a court date, are waiting for a delayed case, or need to understand your options, contact us today. The sooner we understand your situation, the sooner we can help you protect your deadline and plan your next step.
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Office Hours
Monday – Friday: 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
After-hours appointments available for urgent matters
Send Us a Message
Complete the form below or call us directly to start with a free intake screening. Please include the type of case, any deadlines, and whether you have received a notice from USCIS, ICE, EOIR, NVC, or a U.S. consulate.
Our intake team will review your information to determine whether your matter may be a good fit for our firm and whether attorney review is needed. A free intake screening is not a free legal case review. If your situation requires attorney analysis, legal advice, or case strategy, we will explain the next step clearly. In most situations, attorney consultations are $200–$250 for 30 minutes. In complex cases — such as when our attorney must speak separately with a detained individual and then with family members — the consultation may take more time and the fee may be higher.
If you have a court date, ICE detention, removal order, interview, RFE deadline, or scheduled deportation, please say that clearly in your message.
Visit Us in Person
We serve immigrants nationwide through virtual consultations and have office locations in Washington and Virginia.
Alexandria, Virginia
5100 Leesburg PikeSuite 303-D Alexandria, VA 22302 +1 (571) 544-0205 Get Directions
Can't Visit in Person?
We offer virtual consultations for clients across the United States. Whether you are in a different state or simply prefer a remote meeting, we are here to help. Call us to schedule a video consultation.
Common Questions
We handle asylum, removal and deportation defense, family immigration, citizenship and naturalization, BIA and federal court appeals, Special Immigrant Visas (SIV) for Afghan and Iraqi allies, federal habeas corpus for detained individuals, mandamus lawsuits for unreasonably delayed cases, and business and employment immigration. If you are unsure whether your situation falls within our practice, contact us and we will let you know.
A person may qualify for asylum if they have suffered persecution — or have a well-founded fear of future persecution — because of their race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group. Asylum requires meeting a legal standard, not just showing that something bad happened. The harm must be connected to one of these protected grounds, and there must be a reason the home country's government cannot or will not protect you.
Do not ignore it. A Notice to Appear is the government's formal initiation of removal proceedings against you. It includes a court date or a date to be determined later. Contact an immigration attorney as soon as possible — before any hearing. Do not admit to any allegations on the NTA without legal advice, and make sure your current mailing address is on file with the immigration court.
If you are a U.S. citizen, you can file an I-130 petition for your spouse, who will then go through consular processing abroad to receive an immigrant visa (CR-1 or IR-1). The timeline depends on USCIS processing, the NVC, and the U.S. consulate in your spouse's country. If your spouse has prior immigration violations or other issues, additional steps — including a waiver — may be required. An attorney helps map the right path before anything is filed.
Most lawful permanent residents become eligible to apply for naturalization after five years of continuous residence (or three years if married to and living with a U.S. citizen throughout that period). Eligibility also requires physical presence, good moral character, and other requirements. However, certain issues — long absences, criminal history, tax problems, or prior immigration violations — can affect eligibility. A pre-filing review with an attorney is the safest first step.