Comprehensive Immigration Legal Services
Immigration law is one of the most complex and consequential areas of U.S. law. Whether you are seeking to reunite with family, obtain work authorization, defend against removal, or become a U.S. citizen, the stakes could not be higher.
Justice Law Firm’s immigration attorneys guide clients from over 40 countries through every stage of the immigration process — with clarity, expertise, and a genuine commitment to their future in the United States.
Family-Based Immigration
Family petitions allow U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents to sponsor certain family members for immigration benefits. We assist with:
- Immediate relative petitions (spouses, parents, children of U.S. citizens)
- Preference category petitions (siblings, adult children, spouses of LPRs)
- Marriage-based green cards — adjustment of status and consular processing
- K-1 fiancé(e) visas
- Removal of conditions on conditional residence (Form I-751)
Employment-Based Immigration
We assist employers and foreign national employees with:
- H-1B specialty occupation visas
- L-1 intracompany transferee visas
- O-1 visas for extraordinary ability
- PERM labor certification
- EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3 employment-based green cards
- I-9 compliance and employer audits
Citizenship & Naturalization
We guide eligible lawful permanent residents through the naturalization process — from eligibility assessment to application preparation, interview preparation, and ceremony.
Removal Defense
If you or a family member has received a Notice to Appear (NTA) or is in removal proceedings, experienced representation is critical. We defend clients against removal through:
- Cancellation of removal
- Asylum and withholding of removal
- Voluntary departure
- Motions to reopen or reconsider
- Appeals to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA)
Asylum
Individuals fleeing persecution based on race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group may be eligible for asylum. We represent both affirmative asylum applicants (before USCIS) and defensive applicants (before immigration courts).