About Jennifer Evelyn
Jennifer Evelyn Jaimes practices immigration law. She represents people navigating a complex system of visas, removals, petitions and applications. Her work puts individual clients at the center. She aims to translate technical rules into clear options and next steps.
She trained in law and moved into immigration practice early in her career. That early focus shaped the kinds of matters she handles now. Over time she has taken both courtroom and paperwork-heavy assignments. She learned to balance litigation and administrative advocacy.
Her caseload spans the kinds of matters commonly seen in immigration practice. She represents clients in removal defense and in applications for relief such as asylum and withholding. She prepares family-based petitions, naturalization applications and requests for lawful permanent residence. She also handles humanitarian claims, including U visas and waivers that seek to overcome inadmissibility barriers.
She works with clients at different stages. Some she meets on the first day of detention and helps pursue bond or defense strategies. Others come for paperwork: visas, adjustment of status, consular processing and citizenship filings. She files briefs and supporting evidence, and she appears for interviews and hearings when required. The role often mixes legal research with document management and client counseling.
In contested matters she files appeals and motions as the law allows. She engages with administrative processes and agency deadlines. Her practice involves preparing declarants, gathering corroborating evidence and coordinating expert reports when those elements matter to a claim.
She also advises on eligibility and timing. Immigration law is deadline-driven. Applications can depend on precise timing and documentary proof. She helps clients understand what documentation is needed and what to expect during adjudication. She aims to make the process as clear as possible while preserving legal options.
Outside of individual casework she keeps current on policy changes and procedural updates that affect clients. Immigration rules can shift through regulation, agency policy and court decisions. Staying current helps shape case strategy and filing choices.
As of 2026 she works as an immigration lawyer handling removal defense, family petitions, naturalization and humanitarian relief, and she continues to represent clients through both administrative and adjudicative stages of immigration matters.