Dorminey & Cox, LLC is an immigration law firm that has practiced immigration and nationality law exclusively since 2001. Based in Athens, Georgia, with day offices in the Atlanta metro area, we serve immigration clients throughout the United States and around the world. At The Visa Law Center, we are ready to serve your business or family immigration needs.
If you have an immigration problem, you want an experienced immigration attorney at your side. Dorminey & Cox, LLC, with offices in - Atlanta, Duluth & Athens - can provide the immigration counsel you need to obtain a visa, to become a permanent resident (green card) or a U.S. citizen, or to solve an immigration problem.
If you have an immigration problem, you want an experienced immigration attorney at your side. Dorminey & Cox, LLC, with offices in - Atlanta, Duluth & Athens - can provide the immigration counsel you need to obtain a visa, to become a permanent resident (green card) or a U.S. citizen, or to solve an immigration problem.
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In 2000, attorneys Blair Dorminey and David Cox, partners in a legal tech start-up WebEsq, LLC, organized Dorminey & Cox, LLC/The Visa Law Center as an Internet-based immigration law firm. The focus of this spin-off project was to be primarily on H-1B and L-1 visas for software engineers and programmers for "hi-tech" ventures that were booming in the new millenium.
Over the years, the clients of Dorminey & Cox, LLC/The Visa Law Center have ranged from auto manufacturers to farm workers, from leading-edge biotech research firms to tree planters, from software developers to machinists. Among the thousands of clients we have represented are people from every walk of life, across the U.S. and on every continent except Antartica.
Human migration is as old as humankind. Our ancestors were on the move long before nations and countries were founded. At The Visa Law Center, we believe the right to travel is fundamental, and that labor should flow as freely as capital. Regrettably, the United States is in an intensely restrictive phase of its long and pendular immigration history.
If you previously received a grant of Deferred Action for Child Arrivals (DACA), and your period of deferred action is now expiring, you may request a renewal. However, it is important that you do so in a timely manner to avoid a lapse in your DACA and employment authorization. If your current period of deferred action expires before you receive a renewal of DACA, you will accrue unlawful presence and will not be authorized to work.
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