Catholic Charities is committed to manifesting Christ’s spirit by collaborating with diverse communities, providing services to the poor and vulnerable, promoting human dignity, and advocating for social justice.
Catholic Charities of Los Angeles, Inc.
Area of law
Details
Qulification (if any)
Immigration
Citizenship application, DACA consultation and assistance, green card renewal and status adjustment, Family reunification, Travel permits/advance parole, Reunification of detained unaccompanied minors and their families, Refugees and asylees: immigration application process, such as adjustment of status, work permits, travel documents, family petitions, and citizenship applications
Spouses, parents, children, siblings and fiancés of US citizens and lawful permanent residents can apply, People on probation, asylees, those with temporary protection status (TPS), and others who are eligible to travel outside of the US,
Immigration (Esperanza Immigrant Rights Project)
Represent unaccompanied children before USCIS, EOIR, and state juvenile courts. The most common forms of relief that we pursue are Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) and asylum. We also work with some cases involving T-Visas and U-Visas, Represent adult detainees and released adults and families in immigration removal proceedings, Consultation and representation before the Executive Office of Immigration Review (EOIR) / Immigration Court and before United States Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS)
Work with unaccompanied children and mostly with child survivors of domestic and gang-based violence, Vulnerable immigrants within the detained population at Adelanto Detention Facility; this includes individuals with mental illness, past criminal history, and particularly complicated legal cases, Low cost. Available to immigrants living in any part of the EOIR Los Angeles’s jurisdiction or in USCIS’s District 23. Provide services to adult, juvenile, and child immigrants, those with a criminal or alleged gang history, those who have been victims of crime, domestic violence, or trafficking, or with particularly complicated immigration history.
WHO DO THEY HELP
All
Contact
(213) 251-3400, Esperanza Immigrant Rights Project: (213) 251-3505
Application link
Address
1530 James M Wood Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90015