T-Visa Case Review for Former Alexandra Lozano Clients

Legal Disclosure: This article is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Legal outcomes depend on individual facts and current federal policy. Crescent Law’s communications must be truthful and not misleading under Washington’s professional conduct rules. Washington RPC 7.1
Former clients of Alexandra Lozano Immigration Law may be trying to understand whether they were eligible for a T visa, whether their T visa case was filed, if their evidence was complete, and if they still have legal representation.
The Washington State Bar Association announced that Alexandra Lozano had resigned in lieu of discipline on May 26, 2026, making her permanently ineligible to practice law in Washington. WSBA also stated that Luz Legal, formerly Alexandra Lozano Immigration Law, declared it was closing permanently and would no longer provide legal representation.
If your immigration case involves trafficking, forced work, threats, coercion, abuse by an employer, sexual exploitation, debt, passport control, unpaid labor, or fear of reporting what happened, you may need a T visa case review.
What Is A T Visa?
T nonimmigrant status, often called a T visa, is an immigration benefit for certain victims of severe forms of human trafficking. USCIS states that T nonimmigrant status allows certain trafficking victims to remain in the United States, work, and assist law enforcement in the detection, investigation, or prosecution of human trafficking.
A T visa case may involve labor trafficking, sex trafficking, force, fraud, coercion, threats, physical restraint, debt manipulation, confiscated documents, or other facts showing exploitation.
Why Former Alexandra Lozano Clients Should Review Their T Visa Case
T visa cases are evidence-heavy. A pending or unfinished case may involve Form I-914, a personal statement, supporting evidence, law enforcement contact, derivative family applications, waivers, work authorization, biometrics, USCIS notices, and requests for evidence.
A new attorney may need to review:
- Whether the client was eligible
- Whether Form I-914 was filed
- Whether USCIS issued a receipt notice
- Whether a bona fide determination was made
- Whether work authorization was requested or issued
- Whether USCIS sent a request for evidence
- Whether a waiver was needed
- Whether derivative family members were included
- Whether the client’s address is current with USCIS
- Whether the supporting evidence matches the facts of the trafficking claim
A T visa case should not be left uncertain after a law firm closure. If you do not know the current status of your case, a licensed attorney can help review the file and identify what has been filed, what is missing, and what deadlines may exist.
Documents To Gather Before A T Visa Case Review
If you were previously represented by Alexandra Lozano, Alexandra Lozano Immigration Law, ALIL, or Luz Legal, gather any documents connected to your case.
Helpful documents may include:
- USCIS receipt notices
- Copies of Form I-914
- Copies of Form I-914 Supplement A for family members
- Copies of Form I-192, if a waiver was filed
- Work authorization documents
- Requests for evidence
- Approval, denial, or transfer notices
- Police reports or law enforcement communication, if any
- Labor records, pay records, text messages, contracts, photos, or written threats
- Medical, counseling, or social service records, if available
- Prior attorney contracts, invoices, receipts, and emails
- Any message from Luz Legal about the closure or case file access
You do not need to know whether your experience “counts” as trafficking before asking for legal guidance. The purpose of a case review is to identify the facts, compare them with the legal requirements, and determine what options may still be available.
T Visa, U Visa, Or VAWA?
Some people who experienced abuse or exploitation are not sure which immigration category applies. A person may search for a T visa but actually need a U visa review, a VAWA review, a family-based review, or another strategy. The correct path depends on who caused the harm, what happened, whether a qualifying crime or trafficking issue exists, whether law enforcement was involved, and what immigration history already exists.
Speak With A Licensed Immigration Attorney
If you were a client of Alexandra Lozano Immigration Law and your case involved trafficking, coercion, forced labor, sexual exploitation, threats, or a possible T visa, it is important to confirm your case status and preserve your documents.
Crescent Law reviews immigration cases for clients who need clear next steps after a disruption in representation. This article is for general information only and is not legal advice.

