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Keep families together, prevent a neighbor's deportation, and protect people seeking safety.
 

Urgent and Available Cases

NIJC's network of pro bono attorneys represent asylum seekers, unaccompanied immigrant children, survivors of domestic abuse and low-income individuals applying for naturalization. NIJC screens all cases to ensure individuals are eligible for relief and to prioritize individuals and families who lack the private resources needed to obtain representation elsewhere.

NIJC pro bono attorneys receive training before taking on their first case, and ongoing technical assistance and case support as necessary throughout the life of each case.

Learn about being a pro bono attorney and see the case list for people who need representation.

Asylum: M. from Ecuador seeks safety from corrupt and violent police for himself, his girlfriend, and daughter.

M. speaks Spanish and lives in Chicago.

M. owned a small business in Ecuador where people could pay to use computers and printers. Around August 2018, M. discovered evidence that corrupt police officers were overcharging vendors at a local market near his shop, which he learned from a flash drive two officers left behind after using computers in M.’s store. When the officers came back to retrieve the flash drive, they warned M. that he would have problems if he had looked at the contents of the flash drive and spoke out against them. Afterwards, M. began to receive threats from the police and a gang affiliated with the police. Around January 2019, gang members kidnapped M. and took him to a remote location where they beat and robbed him. After this incident, M. fled the country. People continued to look for him at his shop and threatened to harm his girlfriend and daughter, which led them to flee as well. M.'s merits hearing is on 2/24/2025.

VAWA: E. and her granddaughter seek protection from her abusive U.S. citizen daughter.

E. speaks Spanish and lives in Chicago.

E. has been the victim of physical, verbal, and emotional abuse by her U.S. citizen daughter. On one occasion, E.’s daughter came home intoxicated and demanded E. to hand over daughter’s baby, to which E. refused due to her daughter's intoxication. Daughter hit E. twice in the face while E. was holding the baby. E. kicked daughter out of the house; however, daughter snuck back inside through the window. The window was caught in daughter’s arms, so E. opened the window concerned with her safety and daughter bit E.’s finger severely. Once the daughter let go, she waited outside the front porch and E. called the police and daughter was arrested. E. got an order of protection against her daughter. E. has sought counseling to heal from the abuse she endured by U.S. citizen daughter. E. is eligible to file a VAWA self-petition concurrently with an application for adjustment of status and employment authorization. There is no set deadline.

SIJS: D. and A. seek protection from their abusive and unsupportive father.

D., A., and their mother speak Spanish and live in northern Illinois (Lake County).

D. and A. are siblings aged 14 and 12, from Honduras. They live with their mother. D. and A.'s father was physically abusive to their mother, and both children witnessed this abuse. As a result, their mother decided to separate from their father. Shortly thereafter, she immigrated to the United States. During this transition, D. and A. stayed with their aunt. D. arrived in the United States in July 2023, and A. arrived in August 2023. They were able to reunify with their mother at that time. Since their parents' separation, their father has contacted them only once and has not provided financial or emotional support to D. and A.

 

"Working with NIJC and its clients has been an incredible personal and professional experience for me. Our clients inspire me with their perseverance and hopefulness. I appreciate the opportunity to assist them as they pursue new pathways in their lives."
Ashleigh Ricardo, Winston & Strawn LLP
 

Pro Bono Spotlight

Thanks to the support of more than 2,000 pro bono attorneys from the nation's leading law firms, NIJC has made critical advances in the lives of hundreds of thousands of vulnerable immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers. NIJC provides legal services to more than 9,000 individuals each year and maintains a success rate of 90 percent in obtaining asylum for those fleeing persecution in their home countries.

 

Events

NIJC offers a wide range of immigration law trainings and other opportunities for attorneys to engage with the organization's mission. An attorney taking a case for the first time must attend one of NIJC's quarterly trainings.

 

Federal Litigation

NIJC and its pro bono attorneys are on the vanguard of federal impact litigation and advocacy, setting positive precedents for people seeking human rights protections within the United States and defending against the administration's efforts to undermine access to due process.