Let your case speak for itself.

You came here looking for a service menu and probably hoping to find your case on it. A list of visa classifications, a dropdown of immigrant categories, a set of practice areas to sort yourself into. They look like the pillars on certain houses: purely ornamental, never load-bearing. You would choose the closest match, contact the firm, and proceed as if the match were real.

That is how we end up with cases that never should have been filed by lawyers who never should have taken them from clients who never should have trusted the assumptions that produced them. The menu steers good cases into ill-fitting categories. Some cases live and die as sponsored results. SEO-driven architecture has turned advice into merchandising, where keywords matter more than the sentences that contain them.

I work the other way around. Your case determines the category. Your case sets the menu.

To decide whether I am the right person for your case, read about the cases I have worked on in Case Studies. Or see the maps I built for navigating a system that resists explanation, in Tools. Or consider something in a different register entirely, the Albrecht Index.

If you insist on a service menu, here is how I would describe it:

Employment-Based Immigration

Every major category, including the ones you haven’t considered. The category is one decision. The argument is another. Both have to be right.

Family-Based Immigration

The system was designed for textbook families. Not yours. The complications that matter most are usually the ones the forms don’t have a field for.

Naturalization and Citizenship

Done correctly, it’s the last immigration filing you’ll ever need. The exam itself is shockingly simple. Your record is the real test.

None of these is the first step. The first step is the consultation. The consultation is where I look at your case the way it actually is, and visualize the version of it that succeeds.

Sometimes the right answer is not to make your case at all: not to file a petition you insist on filing, not to appeal a decision someone told you to appeal.

Sometimes the right answer is to wait, build the record, and file the stronger case next year.

Sometimes the right answer is an answer to a question no one asked.

The consultation is not the argument for representation. It is not a cheese sample on a toothpick. It is the meal. It is where the argument for your case begins.

So let’s talk strategy.