Immigration Counsel · Freeport, New York

Immigration Attorney Serving Freeport, NY

Freeport in Nassau County has large Salvadoran, Honduran, Haitian, Dominican, and Jamaican communities alongside long-established African-American and Italian-American populations, and our Freeport caseload draws from across that mix. We are a national U.S. immigration practice serving Freeport clients remotely with bilingual document review, secure digital intake, and evening video consultations that fit small-business and shift-work schedules along Main Street, Sunrise Highway, and Atlantic Avenue. Family-based work is a substantial part of the Freeport docket — I-130 marriage, parent, and sibling petitions; K-1 fiancé visas; I-751 conditional-residency removals; I-601 and I-601A unlawful-presence waivers; and naturalization.

Humanitarian and removal-defense work is a significant part of our Freeport caseload. We handle affirmative asylum and defensive asylum before the immigration court at Federal Plaza, VAWA self-petitions for survivors of abuse, U-visa petitions for crime victims who have cooperated with Nassau County police investigations, T-visa relief for trafficking survivors, TPS renewals for clients from El Salvador, Honduras, Venezuela, Haiti, and other designated countries, and Special Immigrant Juvenile filings for young people who have suffered abuse, abandonment, or neglect.

For Freeport entrepreneurs running restaurants, retail, contracting, marine, and trades businesses along the Nautical Mile and the surrounding commercial corridors, we file E-2 treaty investor petitions where nationality qualifies and L-1A new-office cases. On the employment side, we handle H-1B specialty occupation petitions, EB-2 NIW self-petitions, and EB-2 and EB-3 PERM cases for Freeport professionals. We coordinate consular processing through San Salvador, Tegucigalpa, Port-au-Prince, Santo Domingo, and Kingston for Freeport families. We serve Freeport and the surrounding Nassau communities of Hempstead, Oceanside, Rockville Centre, Long Beach, and Baldwin. Whether the matter is a self-petitioned green card built on a record of research, art, business, or athletics, an employer-sponsored case that requires tight coordination with HR and counsel, a family reunification petition filed alongside consular processing, or a humanitarian or removal-defense matter where the stakes are measured in years and in family separation, we approach every Freeport case with the documentation discipline, candor about timelines, and responsiveness that immigration matters deserve.

Immigration Services We Provide in Freeport

A focused look at the matters Freeport clients bring us most often. We handle the full range of U.S. immigration work — these are simply where local demand tends to concentrate.

Don't see your case type? Browse the complete list of services and every visa category we handle, or request a free evaluation.

Where Freeport Immigration Cases Are Handled

Knowing which government offices touch your case matters. Here is where Freeport immigration matters are typically handled — the offices we appear before and file with on behalf of clients across Long Island.

USCIS Field Office

USCIS Long Island Field Office30 Barretts Avenue, Holtsville, NY 11742some Nassau County interviews are held at the Garden City office, 711 Stewart Avenue

Biometrics (ASC)

the USCIS Application Support Center serving Long Island

Immigration Court

the Central Islip Immigration Court100 Federal Plaza, Central Islip, NY 11722

Federal Court

U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Central Islip)

Freeport Immigration FAQs

Common questions from Freeport clients about how immigration cases work locally.

Where will my USCIS interview take place if I live in Freeport?

Freeport cases are generally scheduled at USCIS Long Island Field Office at 30 Barretts Avenue, Holtsville, NY 11742 — some Nassau County interviews are held at the Garden City office, 711 Stewart Avenue. We prepare you for exactly what that office asks and, where the interview is waived, we make sure the record supports approval without one.

Which immigration court handles removal cases for Freeport residents?

Removal proceedings involving Freeport residents are heard at the Central Islip Immigration Court at 100 Federal Plaza, Central Islip, NY 11722. If you have received a Notice to Appear, we can represent you there and evaluate every form of relief you may qualify for.

What happens if my Freeport case is stuck at USCIS well past normal processing times?

When a case sits unreasonably long past posted processing times, we can file a mandamus action in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Central Islip) to compel a decision. We first exhaust service requests and case inquiries, then litigate if the delay continues.

Can you help with an EB-1A or EB-2 NIW self-petition from Freeport?

Yes. Many Freeport clients qualify for a self-petitioned green card that skips employer sponsorship and PERM. We build EB-1A and EB-2 NIW cases to the evidentiary standard USCIS expects after Matter of Dhanasar, including independent expert letters and a documented record of impact.

Do you handle family green cards and naturalization for Freeport residents?

Yes — marriage-based green cards, I-130 petitions for parents, spouses, children, and siblings, K-1 fiancé visas, I-751 removal of conditions, and N-400 naturalization are a core part of our Freeport caseload, filed with the documentation care USCIS now demands.

Which federal court would hear a lawsuit if USCIS unlawfully delays or denies my Freeport case?

A challenge to an unlawful delay or denial for a Freeport resident is generally brought in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Central Islip). We assess whether an APA or mandamus claim is the right tool before filing.

Need help with your immigration case?

Hasan Legal PC attorneys handle USCIS petitions, family immigration, employment-based green cards, and naturalization across Washington DC, Virginia and Maryland.

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For informational purposes only — not legal advice · Consult an attorney for your specific situation.