Practical help for families from Mexico and Latin America—clear plans for waivers, consular processing, work permits, and court. Respectful, bilingual guidance at every step.
Immigration matters affect families, work, and safety. We protect your privacy, move quickly on deadlines, and explain each step in plain language. From forms and evidence to interviews and hearings, we prepare your case so your voice is heard.
We map pathways—USCIS, consular processing, or EOIR—then verify eligibility, bars, and waivers before we file.
Identity, status, marriage bona fides, hardship, and country‑conditions—indexed and ready for officers and judges.
RFEs, NTAs, biometrics, interviews, merits hearings, and appeal windows—all calendared and tracked.
Mock questions, exhibit review, and logistics so you arrive calm and prepared.
We translate law into next steps, set expectations for timing, and keep you updated—no surprises.
We handle sensitive stories with care and structure affidavits that focus on facts and safety.
Family and marriage cases, consular processing in Ciudad Juárez and other consulates, provisional waivers, adjustment of status, work permits, naturalization, and humanitarian relief.
EOIR hearings and bond requests—organized exhibits, timelines, and testimony plans.
Marriage/fiancé visas, consular processing (CDJ/NVC), and work authorization.
Humanitarian relief: asylum, VAWA, U/T visas, SIJS, TPS, CAT protection.
We listen to your goals and deadlines, then confirm eligibility and risks. You leave with a written plan and checklist.
We gather identity, status, family and employment proofs; draft affidavits; and complete forms accurately.
We file with USCIS, NVC/consulate, or court; track biometrics, RFEs, interview notices, and hearing dates.
Mock prep, exhibit review, and logistics. If needed, we brief legal issues and prepare witnesses.
BIA appeals, motions to reopen/reconsider, stays, and post‑decision strategy.
Eligibility review, category selection (c)(9), (c)(8), etc., filing, and renewal tracking so you can work lawfully.
We assess risks and prepare evidence for urgent or standard parole, including humanitarian justifications.
DS‑260, police certificates, medical exam, fees, and interview prep for Ciudad Juárez and other posts.
Passports (current/expired), visas, I‑94, prior EADs, and any USCIS receipts.
Marriage/birth certificates, proof of bona fides, pay stubs, job letters, tax transcripts.
NTAs, EOIR notices, prior orders, police/court records, copies of any filings or appeals.
Note the deadline, gather the items requested, and call us. Responding completely and on time can save months.
Don’t miss the first hearing. We’ll enter appearance, request A‑file/FOIA if needed, and plan relief or termination strategy.
Bring originals, updated evidence, and interpreter if required. We’ll rehearse key questions and logistics.
References to a “team of lawyers/attorneys” may include co‑counsel; sole‑representation results by Attorney Roberto Martinez have been under $1,000,000.
Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. This website is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Viewing this site or contacting us does not create an attorney‑client relationship.