Skokie Immigration Lawyer
Immigration Lawyer Skokie, IL
Whether you are trying to bring a family member to the United States, pursue a work visa, apply for a green card, defend against removal, or become a citizen, every step of the U.S. immigration process includes federal agencies, strict deadlines, and consequences that affect your life and your family’s future. Our Skokie, IL immigration lawyer has been handling the full range of immigration matters for over 25 years, representing individuals, families, and employers across Illinois and beyond. Contact Dworsky Law Group to talk through your situation.
Why Choose Dworsky Law Group for Immigration Cases in Skokie, IL?
A Full-Service Immigration Practice With Broad Federal Reach
Ashley Dworsky founded Dworsky Law Group, focusing on all areas of immigration law, with an emphasis on both business and family immigration. He earned his law degrees from the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, and is admitted to the State Bars of Illinois and New York, the United States Federal Court for the Northern District of Illinois, the Seventh and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals, the South African Bar, and the United States Supreme Court. That range of admissions is uncommon among immigration practitioners in the Chicago area, and it means our clients are represented at every level of the process, from the initial USCIS filing through federal appellate review if a case requires it.
Immigration law has been rapidly changing over the last decade. Policy shifts under different administrations, travel ban updates affect entire nationalities, USCIS processing times fluctuate significantly by case type and service center, and new enforcement priorities place people into removal proceedings who had no expectation of being there. Staying current on all of it is part of the work.
25 Years Across Every Area of Immigration Law
Ashley Dworsky has been practicing immigration law for over 25 years. He has handled family-based immigration cases, employment-based petitions, green card applications, naturalization cases, asylum claims, removal defense proceedings, investor visas, and waivers of inadmissibility. The breadth of that experience matters because immigration cases can develop unexpected complications or necessitate a change in direction. A family-based green card case can turn into a waiver case. A work visa petition can lead to a path toward permanent residence. A naturalization application can raise issues that trace back to events that happened decades ago. Having an attorney who has worked across all of these areas means the full picture gets evaluated, not just the immediate filing.
Results for Individuals, Families, and Employers
Dworsky Law Group has helped clients throughout Illinois navigate some of the most difficult immigration situations, from detained individuals facing imminent removal to employers trying to maintain a lawful workforce amid increasing I-9 compliance pressure. The firm has guided clients through conditional green card processes, complex consular processing cases, and asylum proceedings for individuals from countries experiencing significant political upheaval.
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“I had a great experience with Dworsky Law Firm. Ashley was extremely helpful and stayed focused on my case from start to finish. He explained everything clearly and made sure I always knew what was going on. You can tell he truly cares about his clients. I definitely recommend them.” — Max M CINARCI
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Types of Immigration Cases We Handle in Skokie
Dworsky Law Group handles all areas of immigration law. The cases we work on range from routine visa applications to highly complex removal defense proceedings. Here is what we handle.
- Family-Based Immigration. U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents may sponsor certain family members for green cards. The process depends on the relationship between the petitioner and the beneficiary, whether the beneficiary is inside or outside the United States, and the beneficiary’s immigration history. We handle immediate relative petitions, family preference category cases, and the adjustment of status or consular processing that follows.
- Fiance Visa. Foreign nationals engaged to U.S. citizens may enter the United States on a K-1 visa for the purpose of marriage. The couple must marry within 90 days of entry, after which the foreign spouse applies for adjustment of status. We handle the full K-1 process from the initial I-129F petition through the green card application.
- Marriage Green Card. Marriage-based green cards are among the most scrutinized immigration benefits USCIS adjudicates. Officers are trained to evaluate whether a marriage is bona fide, and the evidentiary standards are demanding. We prepare clients thoroughly for the process, including the USCIS interview and any requests for evidence that arise.
- Work Visas. Employers who need to hire foreign national workers and professionals seeking work authorization in the United States both face a complex regulatory landscape. We handle H-1B specialty occupation petitions, L-1 intracompany transfers, O-1 extraordinary ability visas, E-2 investor visas, TN status for Canadian and Mexican professionals, and the employment-based green card process. We represent both employers and workers.
- Green Cards. Lawful permanent residence is available through family relationships, employment, asylum, and other humanitarian categories. The path to a green card depends on how someone qualifies and where they are in the process. We handle adjustment of status for applicants already in the United States and consular processing for those abroad.
- Naturalization. Permanent residents who meet the residence, presence, and good moral character requirements may apply for U.S. citizenship. We prepare clients for the N-400 application, the USCIS interview, and the civics and English tests. Complicated histories require careful analysis before filing.
- Asylum. Individuals who face persecution in their home countries on account of race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group may qualify for asylum or related humanitarian protections. We handle both affirmative asylum filings with USCIS and defensive asylum in removal proceedings.
- Deportation and Removal Defense. Respondents in removal proceedings face immigration court hearings, strict deadlines, and immediate, severe consequences. We represent clients before immigration judges, the Board of Immigration Appeals, and the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Relief options include cancellation of removal, adjustment of status, asylum, and voluntary departure, depending on the facts of the case.
Illinois and Federal Legal Requirements for Immigration Cases
The INA defines the visa categories available to immigrants and nonimmigrants, the grounds of inadmissibility and deportability, and the procedures for applying for immigration benefits and contesting removal. Each visa category has its own eligibility requirements, filing procedures, and processing timelines. What applies to an H-1B petition has no bearing on how an asylum case is evaluated. The legal standards are entirely different.
Illinois residents in removal proceedings appear before the Chicago Immigration Court, which is administered by the Executive Office for Immigration Review. Appeals from immigration judge decisions go to the Board of Immigration Appeals, and federal circuit court review for Illinois cases goes to the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Ashley Dworsky is admitted to practice before the Seventh Circuit, which means clients whose cases reach that level do not need to find different counsel.
Recent alien registration requirements affect a broad range of noncitizens currently in the United States, including those with pending applications and those with prior immigration violations. Public charge standards have also evolved significantly in recent years, affecting how green card and visa applications are evaluated by both USCIS and consular officers. Staying current on these regulatory developments is not optional when you are advising clients whose immigration status depends on them.
Important Aspects of a Skokie Immigration Case
Understanding Which Category Applies
Immigration law is not one process. There are dozens of visa categories, multiple paths to a green card, several forms of humanitarian protection, and a separate court system for removal proceedings. The first and most important question in any immigration matter is which category the client falls into and what the requirements are for that specific benefit. Getting this wrong at the outset can mean years of delays or a filing that creates more problems than it solves. We conduct a thorough intake review of every client’s immigration history and current status before recommending any course of action.
Prior Immigration History
Almost every immigration case is affected by events that occurred before the current filing. Prior visa applications and their outcomes, prior periods of unlawful presence, prior entries without inspection, prior removal orders, prior criminal matters, and prior misrepresentations on immigration forms all factor into the analysis. Many applicants do not fully disclose their prior history because they do not realize its relevance or because they hope it will not come up. It always comes up. USCIS maintains records, consular officers have access to prior application data, and immigration judges review the full file. We review the prior history completely before any filing is made, because the sequence of disclosures and filings matters enormously. Mandatory registration requirements currently in effect make this analysis even more important for clients who have been in the country without status.
Timing and Deadlines
Immigration cases run on federal timelines that do not accommodate delays. The one-year asylum filing deadline. The 90-day marriage window on a K-1 visa. The 30-day deadline to appeal a removal order to the BIA. The 90-day window to file an I-751 to remove conditions on a green card. Missing any one of these deadlines can foreclose options entirely. We track every deadline in every active case and prepare clients well in advance so that filings are not rushed or incomplete. The current USCIS processing environment also affects timing decisions, particularly for applicants with time-sensitive situations.
Requests for Evidence and Denials
USCIS issues Requests for Evidence in a significant percentage of immigration cases. An RFE is not a denial, but it is not routine either. It means the adjudicator has identified a gap or inconsistency in the application that needs to be addressed before a decision can be made. A well-organized, thorough RFE response can save a case. A poorly prepared one can confirm the officer’s concerns and lead to a denial. If a case is denied, the options depend on the type of case: motions to reopen or reconsider, appeals to the AAO, or in some cases, refiling. Changes to USCIS form requirements in recent years have increased the risk of RFEs for applicants whose filings do not reflect the current form versions and instructions.
The Role of Criminal History
Criminal convictions affect immigration cases in ways that are completely separate from the criminal justice consequences. A misdemeanor that resulted in a small fine and no jail time can trigger deportability or inadmissibility, depending on the offense. An expunged conviction does not disappear for immigration purposes. Prior drug offenses, domestic violence convictions, crimes involving moral turpitude, and aggravated felonies all carry specific immigration consequences that must be analyzed before any application is filed or any plea is entered in a criminal case. We determine the immigration consequences of prior criminal history at every intake, and we work with criminal defense counsel when a client is facing current charges that could affect their status.
Employer Compliance Obligations
For business clients, immigration law does not end when the visa petition is approved. Employers who sponsor work visas take on ongoing obligations related to I-9 verification, Labor Condition Agreement maintenance, and compliance with the terms of the visa. Recent changes affecting employment authorization have added additional details to employers’ management of their foreign national workforce. ICE audit activity has increased, and the penalties for I-9 violations are significant. We help employers build and maintain compliance systems that hold up under scrutiny.
Contact Dworsky Law Group
Immigration cases affect every part of a person’s life: their ability to work, to stay with their family, to build a future in the United States. The process is demanding, the stakes are high, and the margin for error is narrow. You can trust our Skokie immigration lawyer to handle every detail of your application, ensuring it and its supporting documentation are complete and compliant with current federal laws.
Dworsky Law Group has been handling the full range of immigration matters in Illinois for over 25 years, from straightforward green card applications to complex removal defense proceedings at the federal appellate level. Whatever your immigration situation, contact us to schedule a consultation and get a clear picture of your options.
