About Casey A
Casey A Quiroga built his legal foundation at Gonzaga University School of Law, where he earned his J.D. in 2004. He moved into practice in Washington soon after and established professional ties that continue to define his work nearly two decades later. The law school years gave him the classroom grounding that he translated into practical courtroom and client work.
He began his career in the Spokane area and by 2009 had become a partner at Quiroga Law Office, PLLC. Over time he expanded his practice footprint while maintaining local roots. Records show memberships in the Washington State Bar Association beginning in 2007 and continuing to the present, alongside memberships in the Spokane County Bar Association and the American Bar Association that began the same year.
Quiroga has also been involved with organizations tied to federal practice. He holds membership in the Federal Bankruptcy Bar Association for the Eastern District of Washington since 2007. That affiliation, together with a certification in Income Tax Assistance from the Internal Revenue Service, signals work that often touches federal procedure and financial issues. He is licensed to practice in Washington and is admitted to appear before the Federal Circuit.
Colleagues and court records reflect a practice shaped by overlapping areas of law. His office locations and organizational ties indicate sustained work on immigration-related matters in eastern Washington. At the same time he handles questions that bring tax and bankruptcy concerns into play, areas where federal rules and administrative practice matter. He has pursued the mix of local advocacy and federal practice where clients need counsel who can move between state courts, federal bankruptcy proceedings and administrative tax processes.
Today he maintains offices associated with Spokane Immigration Lawyers and Tri Cities Immigration Lawyers. He also continues as partner at Quiroga Law Office, PLLC, practicing in Washington and before the Federal Circuit. His current practice centers on immigration matters and on related tax and bankruptcy issues when they intersect with immigration cases.