U Visa Lawyer for Victims of Crime Seeking Immigration Protection
If you experienced qualifying criminal activity and have questions about U Visa eligibility, certification, evidence, or your immigration status, J Kelley Law Group can help you understand your options with careful, bilingual immigration guidance.
- Nationwide Immigration Help
- English & Spanish Support
- Maryland & North Carolina Offices
U Visa cases depend on specific facts, documentation, and certification requirements. Speaking with a legal team can help you understand what may be possible before taking the next step.
Guidance for eligibility, certification, documentation, and immigration concerns.
What Is a U Visa?
A U Visa, officially known as U nonimmigrant status, may provide temporary immigration protection for certain victims of qualifying criminal activity who meet specific legal requirements. This page focuses on U Visa legal guidance, including eligibility review, certification concerns, documentation, and case preparation. For broader immigration services, visit our Immigration Law page.
Protection-Based Immigration Option
A U Visa may be available when a person experienced qualifying criminal activity and the facts support the legal requirements for this immigration protection.
Case-Specific Eligibility Review
Eligibility can depend on the facts of what happened, the available evidence, immigration history, and whether certification requirements can be addressed.
Legal Help With Documentation
U Visa petitions often require organized forms, personal statements, supporting evidence, and careful review of certification-related issues.
Important: A U Visa case should be reviewed carefully before filing. J Kelley Law Group helps clients understand possible next steps without promising approval, results, or processing times.
Who May Qualify for a U Visa?
U Visa eligibility is not based only on being the victim of a crime. A case should be reviewed carefully to understand whether the facts, evidence, certification issues, and immigration history may support a petition.
Every case is fact-specific. The requirements can depend on what happened, the harm involved, whether the applicant has information about the crime, and whether helpfulness to a certifying agency can be shown.
Victim of Qualifying Criminal Activity
A U Visa may be available to certain victims of qualifying criminal activity, but the specific facts and legal category should be reviewed before deciding how to move forward.
Substantial Physical or Mental Abuse
The petition should address how the criminal activity affected the person physically, emotionally, or mentally, based on the evidence available in the case.
Information About the Crime
U Visa cases usually require showing that the applicant has information about the qualifying criminal activity and can explain the relevant facts clearly.
Helpful to Law Enforcement or a Certifying Agency
The case may need to show that the applicant was helpful, is being helpful, or is likely to be helpful to law enforcement, prosecutors, judges, or another qualifying certifying agency.
Immigration Status and Waiver Concerns
Immigration history, prior entries, inadmissibility issues, or removal concerns should be reviewed carefully because they may affect the strategy and required filings.
Why Form I-918 Supplement B Matters in a U Visa Case
A U Visa case usually requires Form I-918 Supplement B, U Nonimmigrant Status Certification, signed by an authorized certifying official. This certification helps show that the applicant was helpful, is being helpful, or is likely to be helpful in the investigation or prosecution of qualifying criminal activity.
Certifying Agency
Depending on the case, certification may involve law enforcement, prosecutors, judges, or another qualifying official.
Helpfulness Requirement
The certification relates to whether the person has been, is being, or may be helpful to the certifying agency.
No Guaranteed Certification
Legal guidance can help prepare the request carefully, but no attorney can guarantee that an agency will sign.
Qualifying Criminal Activity Should Be Reviewed Carefully
U Visa eligibility can depend on whether the criminal activity fits federal U Visa requirements and whether the available evidence supports the case. This review should be handled with care and without assumptions.
Examples may include certain forms of domestic violence, felonious assault, sexual assault, trafficking, stalking, extortion, witness tampering, and other qualifying or substantially similar criminal activity.
Careful review matters. The name of the offense is not the only issue. The facts, records, certification, and legal category should be reviewed together.
Domestic Violence
Felonious Assault
Sexual Assault
Trafficking
Stalking
Extortion
Witness Tampering
Substantially Similar Activity
This section is not a complete eligibility analysis. A U Visa case should be reviewed based on the specific facts, evidence, certification issues, and immigration history involved.
Evidence That May Support a U Visa Petition
A U Visa petition is often evidence-heavy. The goal is to organize the facts, records, personal statement, certification issues, and supporting materials in a clear and respectful way.
Police or Agency Records
Reports, agency records, or related documents may help explain what happened and how the matter was reported or handled.
Personal Statement
The applicant’s statement can help explain the facts, harm, cooperation, and personal impact in the applicant’s own words.
Medical or Counseling Records
When available and appropriate, records may help document physical, emotional, or mental harm connected to the criminal activity.
Witness or Supporting Statements
Statements from people with relevant knowledge may help support parts of the case when they are accurate and useful.
Immigration History
Prior entries, filings, removals, inadmissibility issues, or other immigration concerns should be reviewed before filing.
Family Documentation
If family members may be included, relationship documents and related records may need to be prepared carefully.
Not every document applies to every case. The right evidence strategy depends on the facts, available records, and legal issues involved.
Can Family Members Be Included in a U Visa Case?
Certain qualifying family members may be included or petitioned for in a U Visa case, depending on the principal applicant’s age, family relationship, and case facts.
Family eligibility is not automatic. Form I-918 Supplement A may be used for qualifying family members, but the right approach depends on the specific relationship and legal requirements.
Spouse
A spouse may be considered in certain U Visa cases, but eligibility depends on the principal applicant’s circumstances and the requirements for qualifying relatives.
Children
Children may be eligible for derivative consideration in some cases, depending on age, relationship, documentation, and the principal U Visa petition.
Other Qualifying Relatives
Other family members may be considered depending on the principal applicant’s age, relationship category, and the facts of the case.
Important: This section is a general overview. Whether family members can be included depends on the principal applicant’s age, family relationship, documentation, and the specific U Visa filing strategy.
U Visa Waiting Times, Work Authorization, and Case Expectations
U Visa cases can involve long waiting periods because of the USCIS review process and the annual statutory cap. Careful preparation from the beginning can help clients understand what may happen next without relying on promises about timing or outcomes.
Case Review and Eligibility
The first step is reviewing the facts, possible qualifying criminal activity, immigration history, and whether a U Visa may fit the situation.
Certification and Evidence
The case may require a certification request, supporting records, a personal statement, and documents that help explain eligibility.
Petition Preparation
The petition should be prepared carefully because USCIS review may involve the forms, certification, evidence, family issues, and waiver concerns.
USCIS Review and Waiting Concerns
After filing, the case may involve USCIS review, waiting-list issues, bona fide determination review, or work authorization questions depending on the case.
When the statutory cap has been reached, eligible petitioners may be placed on a waiting list. Some petitioners may receive deferred action or parole and may be eligible to apply for work authorization, depending on USCIS review and the facts of the case.
What If You Are Undocumented or Have Immigration Concerns?
Some people considering a U Visa may be undocumented, may have overstayed a visa, may have prior immigration issues, or may be worried about immigration court. These concerns should be reviewed carefully because some U Visa applicants may need a waiver of inadmissibility, such as Form I-192, depending on the case.
Undocumented Status
Being undocumented does not mean a person should assume there are no options, but the facts and immigration history should be reviewed first.
Prior Immigration History
Prior entries, overstays, previous filings, inadmissibility concerns, or past immigration decisions may affect the strategy.
Removal or Court Concerns
If you are in immigration court or have a prior removal order, your situation should be reviewed carefully before deciding next steps.
Before moving forward, immigration history matters. A careful legal review can help identify whether waiver issues, court concerns, prior removal issues, or other immigration facts may affect the U Visa petition.
How J Kelley Law Group Helps With U Visa Preparation
U Visa preparation involves more than completing forms. J Kelley Law Group helps clients review eligibility, organize documents, understand certification issues, and prepare the petition with careful attention to the facts of each case.
A focused legal process for serious U Visa concerns.
JKLG guides clients through the parts of a U Visa case that often require careful preparation, including Form I-918, certification strategy, supporting evidence, family questions, immigration history, and communication throughout the process.
Eligibility Review
JKLG helps review whether the facts, harm, evidence, helpfulness, and immigration history may support a U Visa petition.
Certification Strategy
The team helps clients understand Form I-918 Supplement B issues and how a certification request may need to be prepared.
Evidence Organization
JKLG helps organize records, statements, documentation, and supporting materials so the case can be presented clearly.
Form I-918 Petition Preparation
The firm helps prepare the U Visa petition carefully, including required forms and supporting materials based on the case.
Family Member Review
JKLG helps evaluate whether qualifying family-member issues may need to be addressed as part of the U Visa strategy.
Clear Communication in English and Spanish
Clients receive guidance in English and Spanish so they can better understand the process, documents, and possible next steps.
Nationwide U Visa Immigration Help in English and Spanish
Because immigration law is federal, J Kelley Law Group may assist U Visa clients across the United States when appropriate. The firm provides immigration legal guidance in English and Spanish, with office support in Montgomery Village, Maryland and Raleigh, North Carolina.
- U Visa Help Nationwide
- Bilingual Legal Support
- Maryland and North Carolina Office Support
J Kelley Law Group supports immigration clients nationwide, with bilingual communication and office support available through the firm’s Maryland and North Carolina locations.
Montgomery Village, Maryland
Office support for immigration clients and families seeking guidance from J Kelley Law Group.
Open Maryland Office in Google MapsRaleigh, North Carolina
Local office presence for immigration matters while JKLG’s immigration services may support clients nationwide.
Open Raleigh Office in Google MapsU Visa Questions We Commonly Help Clients Answer
These questions help explain common U Visa concerns about eligibility, certification, immigration status, family members, timing, and bilingual nationwide immigration support.
Do I need a lawyer to apply for a U Visa?
A lawyer is not required in every immigration case, but U Visa petitions can involve certification, evidence, waivers, family questions, and immigration history. Legal guidance can help you understand what your case may require.
What is Form I-918 Supplement B?
Form I-918 Supplement B is the U Nonimmigrant Status Certification. It is signed by an authorized certifying official and relates to helpfulness in the investigation or prosecution of qualifying criminal activity.
What crimes may qualify for a U Visa?
Examples may include certain forms of domestic violence, felonious assault, sexual assault, trafficking, stalking, extortion, witness tampering, and other qualifying or substantially similar criminal activity.
Can I apply for a U Visa if I am undocumented?
Some applicants may have immigration status concerns, prior entries, overstays, or inadmissibility issues. Those facts should be reviewed carefully because a waiver may be needed in some cases.
Can my family members be included in my U Visa case?
Certain qualifying family members may be included or petitioned for depending on the principal applicant’s age, family relationship, documentation, and case facts.
Can I apply if the criminal case is closed?
A closed criminal case does not automatically answer the U Visa question. The facts, certification issue, helpfulness, records, and available evidence should be reviewed before deciding next steps.
How long does a U Visa case take?
U Visa cases can involve long waiting periods, USCIS review, the annual cap, waiting-list issues, and work authorization questions. No specific timeline should be promised.
Can a U Visa lead to a green card?
U Visa status may later connect to green card eligibility only if legal requirements are met, including continuous physical presence and other eligibility factors.
Can J Kelley Law Group help me if I live outside Maryland or North Carolina?
Yes. Because immigration law is federal, JKLG may assist immigration clients nationwide when appropriate. You can also visit the firm’s Immigration Law page for broader immigration services.
Can J Kelley Law Group help me in Spanish?
Yes. J Kelley Law Group provides immigration legal support in English and Spanish so clients can better understand their documents, options, and possible next steps.
Talk to a U Visa Lawyer About Your Immigration Options
If you believe you may qualify for a U Visa, need help understanding certification, have questions about family members, or are worried about your immigration status, J Kelley Law Group can help you review possible next steps carefully.
- Nationwide Immigration Help
- English and Spanish Support
- Maryland and North Carolina Office Support
