About Nicholas
Nicholas Pasquarello earned his law degree from The Ohio State University Michael E. Moritz College of Law in 2020 after completing undergraduate studies at Ohio State University, where he double-majored in psychology and sociology and received a B.S. in 2012. He arrived at law school after several years of undergraduate study that combined social science coursework and practical research. The law program in Columbus rounded out that background with coursework in constitutional law, administrative law and federal procedure.
He is licensed to practice in Ohio. Since finishing law school he has maintained active professional memberships that reflect areas of practice and interest. He joined the American Immigration Lawyers Association in 2021 and became a member of the bar of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in 2023. Those affiliations point to work that spans both immigration matters and federal appellate procedure, and they provide regular contact with issues that cross state and federal lines.
Pasquarello’s undergraduate training informs how he approaches client interviews and case development. The study of psychology and sociology tends to make him attentive to factual detail and the human factors that underlie many legal disputes. That background complements the more technical demands of appellate writing, where clarity and precise record analysis matter for judges deciding appeals.
Early in his post-graduate career he worked on matters that required careful procedural handling and an eye for record preservation. He has developed written advocacy skills aimed at persuading tribunals through concise argument and targeted citation. Memberships in professional organizations have given him access to continuing legal education and peer discussions on evolving immigration law and federal practice standards.
Colleagues describe his work style as methodical and focused on building a clear factual narrative. He spends time preparing administrative records and appellate briefs, and he values practice that keeps factual accuracy in the foreground. He also follows developments in federal appellate decisions that affect immigration outcomes and administrative law questions.
He currently focuses his practice on immigration and appellate matters in Ohio.