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Aman U. Khan
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Biography
Aman is a U.S. licensed immigration attorney based in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metropolitan Area and serves clients worldwide.
Practice Areas
- Immigration Law
- Asylum, Citizenship, Deportation Defense, Family Visas, Green Cards, Immigration Appeals, Investment Visas, Marriage & Fiancé(e) Visas, Student Visas, Visitor Visas, Work Visas
- Business Law
- Business Contracts, Business Dissolution, Business Finance, Business Formation, Business Litigation, Franchising, Mergers & Acquisitions, Partnership & Shareholder Disputes
- Real Estate Law
- Commercial Real Estate, Condominiums, Easements, Eminent Domain, Homeowners Association, Land Use & Zoning, Mortgages, Neighbor Disputes, Residential Real Estate, Water Law
Jurisdictions Admitted to Practice
- Texas
- State Bar of Texas
- ID Number: 24104527
Languages
- English: Spoken, Written
- Hindi: Spoken
- Kashmiri: Spoken
- Punjabi: Spoken
- Urdu: Spoken
Professional Associations
- State Bar of Texas
- Member
- Current
- American Immigration Lawyers Association
- Memeber
- Current
Publications
Articles & Publications
Certifications
- Law License
- The State Bar of Texas
Websites & Blogs
- Website
- Khan Law, PLLC
Legal Answers
4 Questions Answered
- Q. I want to know if someone can file the green card application with an expired passport and expired visa on it?
- A: If you're obtaining your green card through consular processing, it is required that you have a valid passport. To obtain a green card, the foreign national is required to enter the Untied States, so with an expired passport, you will not be issued a visa to enter the U.S.
- Q. What is the earliest that an I-129 petition can be filed for an L-1 visa extension, when filing via a service center?
- A: Your employer may file an L-1A EOS 6 months prior to the expiration of your I-94.
- Q. If I leave the US after my legal stay, but having I-539 VISA extension submitted, do I accumulate unlawful days?
- A: Foreign nationals may remain in the United States during the pendency of their extension. However, if a foreign national decides to depart the U.S. while the application is pending, it will merely be considered abandoned and the foreign national will not accumulate unlawful presences.
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