The U visa protects non-citizens who suffered substantial harm from crimes like domestic violence, sexual assault, or felonious assault and who are helpful to investigators or prosecutors. Castel & Hall LLP develops strong filings for clients across Massachusetts—organizing proof of harm, cooperation, and rehabilitation—while coordinating with broader deportation defense needs if a court case is pending.
We pursue the law-enforcement certification (Form I-918B) from police, prosecutors, or judges, assemble medical and counseling evidence, and submit your petition to USCIS. Due to annual caps, many applicants enter a waitlist with deferred action and work permits. If trafficking was involved, we also analyze T visa eligibility to choose the strongest path.
Possibly. Some agencies will certify based on restraining orders, court records, or later reporting. Your lawyer can help approach the right agency and frame the request.
There’s a statutory cap of 10,000 principal U visas per year, creating a multi-year backlog. Many applicants can receive “bona fide determination” work authorization while they wait.
Spouses and children (and for minor victims, parents and certain siblings) may qualify as derivatives.
U visa applicants can request broad inadmissibility waivers (Form I-192). Serious issues still require strong equities and documentation.
Certifying agencies can take safety concerns into account. Your attorney can coordinate with victim-advocacy resources and request confidentiality measures.
Leaving the U.S. can complicate eligibility. Discuss risks before any travel.
After 3 years in U status and continued cooperation, you may apply for a green card if otherwise admissible.