About Hassan M.
Hassan M. Ahmad built his academic foundation at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he earned a B.A. in International Studies in 1992. He continued his studies at Tulane University School of Law and received his J.D. in 1997. Those years of study combined international perspective and legal training and set the stage for a career rooted in cross-border issues.
After law school he entered legal practice and later obtained licensure in both Virginia and Maryland. He has maintained those state admissions while developing a practice that intersects federal immigration systems and local client needs. His dual-state licensure allows him to handle matters that involve clients and agencies across the Mid-Atlantic.
Professional affiliation has been part of his work life. He joined the American Immigration Lawyers Association in 2005 and has remained a member. That long-term association has kept him connected to the broader immigration bar and to evolving policy and procedural developments at the federal level.
His background in international studies and subsequent legal training inform the daily work he undertakes. He advises individuals on immigration matters and assists them through administrative processes that affect status, rights, and family relationships. The practice requires attention to shifting regulations, court decisions, and agency procedures, and he has built a practice that addresses those recurring challenges.
Colleagues and clients encounter a lawyer who combines classroom training from Chapel Hill and Tulane with hands-on experience in regional practice. He works with people from a range of backgrounds and immigration histories, helping them understand options and the likely steps ahead. He aims to explain complex federal procedures in clear terms and to prepare filings and submissions in accordance with applicable rules.
He practices immigration law in Virginia and Maryland. This remains his current area of work, where he continues to represent clients and engage with immigration matters in both states.