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Jey Pepo
3d
Waiver
I need a good lawyer to handle a waiver. Does anyone here know a lawyer who specializes in waivers? Thanks
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this journey is not easy 3d
1)yes (561) 283-2196 William Cavanaugh Immigration Lawyer he's the reason my brother won i601 with no qualified relative he accepted payment you Google him 2)and this is my lawyer (305) 650-9884 Bernard and yam he's also good I won my i601 waiver case with him the only thing is he always busy and always take his sweet time to do things. 3) you can also win a waiver without a lawyer, the smartest strategy is to slow down, breathe, and build a rock-solid package that reads like a professional did it by making sure you fill out the form with zero blanks, double-check every answer for accuracy, include the filing fee or a fee waiver request if eligible, write a detailed personal statement explaining exactly why you need the waiver, gather strong evidence proving extreme hardship to your qualifying relative (U.S. citizen or LPR spouse or parent), and attach all supporting documents that show medical issues, mental health vulnerabilities, financial dependence, debts, bills, leases, taxes, employment problems, childcare responsibilities, family separation risks, country condition reports for the home country, proof of your good moral character, proof of rehabilitation if anything ever happened in your past, photos, affidavits from family and community members, proof of counseling, proof of faith involvement, and anything else that paints the picture that denying your waiver would basically destroy your qualifying relative’s stability, health, income, and emotional well-being. What NOT to miss (seriously, these are the reasons waivers get denied): Do not skip the hardship section. That’s the heart of the whole waiver. Do not focus on YOUR hardship; it must be about your U.S. citizen/LPR spouse or parent. Do not send short or vague explanations—USCIS needs details. Do not forget proof. Every claim must be backed with a document. Do not forget to sign the form. People get denied for this. Do not forget the correct edition of the form. Do not forget translations for any non-English documents. Do not mail your package without making copies. Do not rely only on emotional hardship; add financial, medical, safety, and psychological hardship too. Documents that make a waiver STRONG (don’t skip these): 1. Medical Hardship Doctor letters Prescriptions Diagnoses Treatment plans Medical bills Records showing ongoing care Proof you’re the caregiver 2. Financial Hardship Pay stubs (yours + spouse/parent) Tax returns Rent/mortgage Car notes Daycare expenses Utility bills Bank statements Proof of debts Proof your departure would drop the household income 3. Emotional/Psychological Hardship Therapist letters Counseling records Mental health evaluations Family history of trauma, PTSD, anxiety, depression Past tragedies making separation more damaging 4. Country Conditions (VERY important) U.S. State Department human rights report News articles about violence, kidnapping, corruption Reports on healthcare collapse, job scarcity, political instability Anything showing your spouse/parent cannot safely live in your home country 5. Family Responsibilities Birth certificates of children School records Special needs documentation Proof you support or care for kids or elders 6. Good Moral Character Background checks Police clearance Letters from church, school, neighbors, employers Volunteer records Any proof you contribute to your community. And finally a reminder: Even without a lawyer, people win waivers all the time because waivers are not about fancy legal words—they’re about proof, proof, and more proof, and the more you build a story showing your qualifying relative would genuinely suffer without you, the harder it is for USCIS to deny it
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Jey Pepo3d
@this journey is not easy can you tell me how much did you pay for the waiver please? my Lawyer is asking me for 6000$
this journey is not easy 3d
@Jey Pepo ipaid 3000 my brother paid 3500

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