We can represent you no matter where you are!

Our immigration practice has no boundaries.  US Immigration Attorney Lee represents clients nationwide and internationally, in countries such as Korea, Egypt, India, Pakistan, Philippines, Vietnam, Colombia, South Africa, Uzbekistan, Guatemala, and more.


No matter where you live, US Immigration Attorney Lee can represent you because the practice of US Immigration Law is strictly federal (national) in nature and not state specific. 
This means that US Immigration Attorney Lee, who is licensed before the NJ Supreme Court, can competently represent you before the US Citizenship and Immigration Service or the US Immigration Court in any state because:

(1) immigration law is strictly a
federal law governed by the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) which means that
all US immigration lawyers practices under the same federal legal guidelines regardless of which state they are licensed or located; and

(2) immigration law is primarily an
administrative law where most applications are filed electronically or by mail and therefore immigration attorneys are rarely required to appear in-person before the immigration service.


With the efficient use of e-mail, the internet, a 800 toll free number, and a 866 toll free fax number, we are easily accessible to communicate with all of our clients across the US and around the globe. 

At the same time, with two convenient office locations in Pittsburgh, PA and Princeton, NJ, we  are still able to offer our local clients with the convenience of a personal face-to-face legal representation.

Contact us now to schedule a free initial consultation.



US Immigration Law Resources:

Federal Immigration Law Overview: Overview provided by Wex is a collaboratively-created, public-access law dictionary and encyclopedia sponsored and hosted by the Legal Information Institute at the Cornell Law School

Facts About Federal Preemption: Article published byMonica Guizar with the National Immigration Law Center (June 2007) analyzing state and local inititatives are an unlawful attempt to enforce federal immigration law or regulate immigration.

Doctrine of Federal Preemption

Supremacy Clause and Federal Preemption