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The Court Just Ruled in Your Favor. Now Make USCIS Move on Your Case.

On June 5, 2026, a federal judge declared USCIS’s hold on immigration cases for the 39 affected countries unlawful and vacated it. That is a historic win, but the hold being lifted does not mean your case will move. USCIS has 12 million pending applications. Without legal pressure specifically on your case, you will wait again. Federal litigation is how you make sure that does not happen.

83 Cases Filed

83 mandamus actions filed. Every single one moved forward.

All 50 States

We represent clients nationwide.

Group C Open Now

Join the group lawsuit forming now. Limited spots available.

June 15 Deadline

First batch files June 15, 2026. Spots are limited.

BREAKING NEWS EXPLAINER

DOES ANY OF THIS SOUND FAMILIAR?

You followed every rule. You did everything right. And still, nothing.

Your life is on hold.

You can’t take the job you were offered. You can’t travel. You’re afraid to make long-term plans because you don’t know where you stand.

You’ve been told to just wait.

But you’ve been waiting. And waiting. And nothing is changing.

If any of this describes your situation, what we are about to tell you may change everything.

Federal Litigation: The Legal Path That Forces USCIS to Move

Most people don’t know this option exists. Most immigration attorneys don’t offer it because it requires a different skill set, more work, and specialized federal court experience.

When USCIS delays your case for an unreasonable amount of time, months, or years beyond their own published processing times, with no legitimate explanation, you have the legal right to file a federal lawsuit. Specifically, what’s called a Writ of Mandamus.

A Writ of Mandamus is a federal court order that compels a government agency to perform a duty it has unreasonably failed to perform. In plain language, it forces USCIS to decide on your case.

When You File, Everything Changes

The moment we file, USCIS is legally required to respond. A federal judge is overseeing the timeline. Your case goes from “pending indefinitely” to “actively being reviewed.”

You may receive work authorization while the case is pending.

You are protected from deportation and removal while the case is active.

Filing creates a legal record that your case is being actively contested. This offers meaningful protection during the litigation period.

Filing does NOT hurt your immigration case. Not even a little.

What Happens When Clients Take Action

Real experiences from clients we have represented.
"My case had been stuck for over two years. I had given up hope. After filing, the government was forced to act, and my case finally moved. I wish I had done this sooner."
Client, Family-Based Petition (Country withheld for privacy)
"We had been separated from our child for more than 18 months. Federal litigation was the only thing that actually got the government to respond. We are together now."
Client, Immigrant Visa / Consular Processing
"My work authorization was stuck in administrative processing for over a year. After filing, the case was resolved within months. The process was straightforward and the team kept me informed every step of the way."
Client, Work Visa / Employment Authorization

Disclaimer: Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is different, and eligibility for federal litigation depends on the specific facts of your situation.

Why We're Filing as a Group and Why That Benefits You

We are not filing individual lawsuits. We are organizing a group multi-plaintiff federal action, with dozens of clients with stalled cases filing the same challenge together.

The legal strength is greater.

When one person sues, the government argues it’s a unique outlier. When dozens of people from across the country bring the same challenge, it becomes impossible for the government to call it a coincidence. It exposes a systemic problem. Judges respond differently.

The cost is dramatically lower.

Individual federal litigation costs $5,000 to $10,000 or more. We share resources across the group, which means you gain access to high-level federal litigation at a fraction of what it would cost to file alone.

THE FEE: $1,500 — flat. No hidden fees. No installments.

Who Can Join This Lawsuit?

This filing is specifically for nationals of the 39 countries affected by the USCIS adjudication pause. You may qualify if you meet ALL of the following:

Check every box that applies to you:

— You are a national of one of the 39 affected countries listed below.

— You are physically present in the United States.

— You have a pending application at USCIS — Green Card (I-485), Work Permit (I-765), Family Petition (I-130), Naturalization (N-400), Asylum (I-589), Removal of Conditions (I-751), or any other USCIS benefit application that has been placed on hold or delayed.

— Your case has received no meaningful update for 6 months or more, no interview, no decision, no explanation.

— You are not currently a plaintiff in a similar federal mandamus action for the same application.

IS YOUR COUNTRY ON THE LIST?

This lawsuit covers nationals of the following 39 countries currently subject to the USCIS adjudication pause:

Afghanistan — Angola — Antigua and Barbuda — Benin — Burkina Faso — Burma (Myanmar) — Burundi — Chad — Cote d’Ivoire — Cuba — Republic of the Congo — Dominica — Equatorial Guinea — Eritrea — Gabon — The Gambia — Haiti — Iran — Laos — Libya — Malawi — Mali — Mauritania — Niger — Nigeria — Palestinian Authority (Travel Document Holders) — Senegal — Sierra Leone — Somalia — South Sudan — Sudan — Syria — Tanzania — Togo — Tonga — Turkmenistan — Venezuela — Yemen — Zambia — Zimbabwe

Find Out If You Qualify — Free Case Assessment

Answer a few quick questions so our team can evaluate whether your situation may be eligible for federal litigation. There is no cost to submit this form, and no obligation. If your case looks promising, a member of our team will reach out to discuss next steps.

After you submit, our team will personally review your responses. If your case may
qualify, we will follow up to discuss your options and schedule a paid case review
consultation.

Already submitted and ready to move forward?

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to the questions we hear most often.

Not necessarily, and this is critical to understand. The ruling vacates the policy that froze your case. That is a major legal victory and exactly what we have been arguing. However, USCIS has approximately 12 million pending applications. Lifting the hold puts your case back into active processing, but not to the front of the line. Without specific legal pressure directed at your individual case, your application will sit in that backlog without any obligation on USCIS to prioritize it over anyone else’s. Federal litigation through a mandamus action is how you create that pressure.

No. Filing creates legal accountability that forces USCIS to review your case, often moving faster than years of waiting.

A Writ of Mandamus is a federal court order that compels a government agency to perform a duty it has unreasonably failed to perform. In immigration, this means forcing USCIS to make a decision on your pending application.

Yes. This specific group lawsuit is for nationals of the 39 countries currently subject to the USCIS adjudication pause under Policy Memorandums PM-602-0192 and PM-602-0194. If you are not from one of the 39 listed countries, contact us directly and we can discuss what other legal options may be available for your situation.

The fee is a flat $1,500. This covers your participation as a named plaintiff in this multi-plaintiff federal action. Individual mandamus lawsuits typically cost $5,000 to $10,000; the group structure is what makes this accessible. Full payment is required at signing. There are no payment plans and no refunds once you join the batch.

Your full legal name will appear on the federal court filing. Sensitive information, such as your alien registration number, will be redacted. By joining, you consent to your name appearing on publicly accessible court documents.

Once your eligibility is confirmed and the retainer is signed, our team will guide you through exactly what to provide.

DISCLAIMER: This website is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Participation in this lawsuit does not guarantee approval of your underlying immigration application or petition; federal litigation compels the government to adjudicate your case, not to approve it. Past results described on this page do not guarantee similar outcomes.

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