Mary Khano Foteh Law Office
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Board Certified in Immigration & Nationality Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization. Mary Khano Foteh has been practicing law since 2000, and her practice areas focus on Immigration and Nationality Law, and Family Law. The Law Office of Mary Khano Foteh is dedicated to serving its clients. We strive to provide balanced and personalized legal representation to all of our clients.

In every case, we keep our clients' best interests in mind, and provide honest assessments of their cases. We thoroughly research and prepare each case. Being a small firm has its advantages-it allows for personal and individual attention and treatment of each client and their specific situations. Every client is unique, and that is the most important recognition an attorney can make.
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Being a first-generation Arab-American, Mary Khano Foteh knows the struggles her family experienced when immigrating to the United States over forty years ago. The U.S. immigration laws have changed quite a bit since that time. With the passage of the Homeland Security Act of 2002, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has most of the decision-making power, and has many different agencies under its umbrella.
The Law Office of Mary Khano Foteh lawyers are skilled in working with people who are going through one of the most difficult and stressful periods of their lives. Not only sensitive to clients' needs, our lawyers are effective in achieving results for our clients through a variety of techniques. Those wishing to end their marital relationship must file for divorce with the family courts.
This part of family law, child custody, can oftentimes be the most difficult, and involves custody (i.e. which parent will the child reside with or which parent will have the exclusive right to determine the child's residence), possession (or visitation) schedules, rights and duties each parent will have in regards to raising their child, geographic restrictions on the residence of the child, child support, and health insurance.
Enforcement of court orders is sometimes necessary, especially when one party is not abiding by an order of the court. Enforcement actions can be done on temporary orders or final orders.

Oftentimes, enforcement actions arise when one party is not fulfilling his or her obligation to pay child support or provide health insurance for the children; it can also arise when the terms of the division of property and debt are not being abided by, or when the possession, or visitation, schedule with the children is not being adhered to.
Modification actions occur after a final order has been rendered by a court, and new issues have arisen or changes need to be made to that court order. Modification actions can become necessary when circumstances of the parties and/or children have changed since the rendition of the last court order.
Reviews (2)
Elona Zanaj
Elona Zanaj
Oct 11, 2020
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I highly recommend Mary Foteh. She’s professional, very knowledgeable, and compassionate. She’s currently working on my father’s immigration case, and right before that, she worked on my mother’s immigration case (which by the way had a deportation in the past). Thanks to Mary, my mother got her green card and finally got the chance to come visit us after so long. She’s amazing!
Mark Aly
Mark Aly
Jun 20, 2019
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My wife Anastasiia and I had Mary Foteh as our Attorney for a very complicated case, she was absolutely amazing, she treated our case as if we were family . She was very professional and she tells it like it is no sugar coating. She navigated the immigration system with what seemed like ease to us but we had been told by other attorneys our case would be hard and it was but we got the desired result in the end.