Judd

Judd Azulay

CONTACT INFORMATION

Phone
312.661.9100 x8946
Fax
312.386.5090
Address
203 N. LaSalle, Suite 1550 , Chicago, IL, 60601

Judd Azulay is an attorney and the founding partner of the Chicago-based law firm Immigration Lawyers, LLP. For over 30 years, attorney Azulay has exclusively practiced nationality and immigration law. He has successfully argued about various immigration matters in courts all throughout the United States. Attorney Judd prides himself on his work that expands VAWA protection for women and men, based on emotional or psychological abuse. He has traveled to more than 60 consulates and embassies throughout the world in order to obtain non-immigrant and immigrant visas on behalf of his clients.

Attorney Azulay earned his Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Miami in 1966 and his Juris Doctorate from Cumberland Law School in 1973. He is admitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, the United States Tax Court, and the United States Courts of Appeal for the Sixth, Seventh, Ninth, and Federal Districts. He is a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, the American Bar Association, the Illinois State Bar and the Patent Bar Association.

Attorney Azulay founded Immigration Attorneys, LLP to solely focus on nationality and immigration law. The firm aggressively pursues both defensive applications and affirmative relief in an efficient and zealous manner. The firm strives to take into account the newest government adjudication and policy trends when developing case strategies for clients. The firm is committed to providing the highest quality service possible to each of its clients and always strives to maintain excellent lines of communication with each client. The firm routinely represents clients, including corporations, individuals and families before courts throughout the country, including immigration courts, USCIS district offices, the Administrative Appeals Office, the United States Courts of Appeal, Federal District Courts and the Board of Immigration Appeals.