Removal Proceedings

Representation in Immigration Court

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Courtroom representation at every stage — master calendar, individual hearings, appeals, and motions to reopen.

What Happens in Immigration Court, Step by Step

Removal proceedings move through defined stages, and each one sets up the next. Missing a filing deadline, pleading to the wrong facts at the first hearing, or failing to raise a defense in time can close doors that are difficult or impossible to reopen. We prepare clients for every stage before it arrives.

Our Attorneys

Stages of a Removal Case We Handle:

  1. Notice to Appear and Case Review:
    • Analyzing the charges, factual allegations, and service of the NTA for legal sufficiency.
    • Identifying grounds for termination, including Pereira and Niz-Chavez challenges.

  2. Master Calendar Hearings:
    • Pleading to the allegations and charges, preserving relief applications, and setting filing deadlines with the court.
    • Requesting continuances, changes of venue, or administrative closure where appropriate.

  3. Individual Merits Hearings:
    • Trial-level preparation: witness preparation, direct and cross examination, country-conditions and expert evidence, and detailed exhibit assembly.
    • Legal briefing on eligibility and the discretionary factors the judge is weighing.

  4. Bond Hearings and Detention:
    • Custody redetermination hearings for clients held at the Tacoma Northwest ICE Processing Center and other facilities.
    • Flight-risk and danger analysis, sponsor packets, and release planning.

  5. Appeals to the Board of Immigration Appeals:
    • Notice of appeal filing, full briefing, and — where granted — oral argument.
    • Motions to remand where the record needs to be expanded.

  6. Motions to Reopen and Reconsider:
    • In absentia removal orders based on lack of notice or exceptional circumstances.
    • Changed country conditions, ineffective assistance of counsel, and sua sponte reopening requests.

  7. Petitions for Review at the Ninth Circuit:
    • Filing and briefing petitions for review, motions to stay removal, and related federal court work.

Why Preparation Matters at Every Stage:
  • The record built at the immigration court is the record the BIA and Ninth Circuit will review — there is rarely a chance to add to it later.
  • Deadlines in removal proceedings are short and almost never forgiven.
  • The strongest cases are the ones planned from master calendar forward, not improvised at the merits hearing.

If you have a hearing scheduled, bring the Notice to Appear and any ICE paperwork to your first meeting so we can map the timeline immediately.

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Ready to start your journey?

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Work with Gonzales Law to make your immigration dreams a reality.