The Danger of Copying Old Cases
Copying a prior case to build a new one is one of the most common shortcuts in immigration case production. […]
The Danger of Copying Old Cases Read More »
Copying a prior case to build a new one is one of the most common shortcuts in immigration case production. […]
The Danger of Copying Old Cases Read More »
The most common intake failure in immigration case production is not missing documents. It is incomplete information capture at the
Intake Failure as a Downstream Case Risk Read More »
Speed feels like progress. But in immigration law, fast without structure isn’t efficiency, it’s liability in motion.
Structure First, Then Speed. Read More »
We do not release a case file until it meets a defined production threshold. This is not a preference. It
Case Production Minimum Standard Read More »
Most case delays do not originate at USCIS. They originate inside the firm, in queues that are not monitored, handoffs
Why most case delays are internal, not USCIS-related Read More »
One inconsistency in a well-prepared immigration case does not get overlooked. It gets amplified. Adjudicators are trained to identify discrepancies
The Cost of a Single Inconsistency Read More »
A single inconsistency across supporting documents can undermine an otherwise complete and well-prepared immigration case. This is not a rare
The Operational Risk of a Single Discrepancy Read More »
“We’ll address it if we get an RFE” is not a case strategy. It is a documentation failure deferred. This
The “Fix It at RFE” Deferral Problem Read More »
The U.S. immigration landscape is constantly evolving, and staying informed is essential, especially for employers and foreign workers navigating the
WHAT IS THE H-1B CAP FILING SEASON ALL ABOUT? Read More »
The Intake Failure That Ruins Cases Downstream Most downstream case problems can be traced back to one place: intake. Intake.
The Intake Failure That Ruins Cases Downstream Read More »