About Francine
Francine Prewitt built her career at the intersection of finance and immigration law. She pursued advanced legal studies after law school, earning an LL.M. in Banking, Corporate and Finance Services from Fordham University School of Law in 2011. The graduate degree deepened her grounding in commercial and regulatory matters and shaped the kinds of clients she would later serve.
Her professional path led her into matters that cross national borders and touch both corporate structure and personnel. Prewitt has maintained membership in the State Bar of New York and joined professional organizations that reflect her practice interests, including the American Immigration Lawyers Association and the French American Chamber of Commerce. Those affiliations mirror a practice that often blends business transactions with questions about mobility, visas and cross-border employment.
Colleagues describe her as pragmatic. She handles corporate and banking issues for companies that range from small enterprises to international concerns. That work includes advising on corporate formation, contract negotiation and compliance issues that arise in financial services. At the same time she assists employers and business owners on immigration-related matters that affect staffing and operations.
Prewitt formed Prewitt Law, P.C. to bring those strands together under one roof. The firm represents clients on transactional matters and on immigration processes that intersect with business needs. She approaches each file by mapping the legal steps that will allow a client to move forward: structuring an entity, addressing regulatory requirements, or filing necessary immigration paperwork. The practice is methodical and oriented toward practical outcomes rather than legal theory alone.
Her membership in the French American Chamber of Commerce signals a familiarity with francophone and transatlantic business relations. That background can be useful for clients who operate in or with partners in Europe. Her involvement in the American Immigration Lawyers Association keeps her connected to developments in immigration policy and procedure that affect corporate clients.
Outside the office she keeps current on regulatory shifts and changes in banking law that bear on corporate clients. Her work combines technical training in finance law with hands-on counsel for businesses that must align legal, personnel and financial decisions. She currently practices through Prewitt Law, P.C., where her work centers on corporate and banking matters and business-related immigration issues.