About Klaudia
Klaudia Hall earned an LL.M. in International and Comparative Law from The George Washington University Law School. That advanced degree followed earlier legal training and informed a career that spans state practice and national immigration issues. Her studies in Washington placed her at the intersection of comparative legal systems and international regulation, a background she has carried into her daily work.
She is admitted to practice in Maryland and New York. Over the years she has maintained active memberships in key professional organizations. She belongs to the Maryland State Bar Association. She has been a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association since 2004 and joined the American Bar Association in the same year. Those long-term ties keep her connected to developments in immigration law and professional practice standards.
Hall’s career centers on immigration law. She practices that area exclusively. That specialization shapes the cases she accepts and the issues she tracks. It also informs the professional organizations she chooses to engage with and the continuing legal education she pursues. Practicing in two state jurisdictions requires attention to both local rules and federal immigration processes, a combination she navigates regularly.
Colleagues describe her work rhythm as methodical. She approaches matters by combining the international legal perspective from her LL.M. with the procedural demands of practicing in state courts and before federal immigration bodies. The result is a practice that reflects academic training and practical demands. She has sustained memberships in national bar groups for more than two decades, suggesting a long-term engagement with the field’s evolving questions.
Outside of court dockets and filing deadlines, she has kept a steady presence in professional associations. Her AILA membership since 2004 places her among attorneys who follow federal immigration policy closely. Her ABA membership, begun the same year, connects her to broader legal trends beyond immigration. At the state level, her Maryland bar membership anchors her to local practice rules and networks.
Hall’s educational background and long-standing organizational ties inform how she handles cases today. She combines comparative law training with state licensure in Maryland and New York. She currently practices immigration law exclusively.