Immigration Attorney at Tampa, FL
Licensed for 24 years
,
3030 N Rocky Point Dr W, Tampa, FL 33607
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I became a Florida lawyer in 1999 after graduating from South Texas College of Law as a Doctor of Jurisprudence in the same year. My main focuses in law practice are immigration/citizenship law and family law/divorce. I practice law in those areas because of the way I came to be born in the United States and my upbringing.
My grandfather moved his immediate family from Cuba to the United States a couple of years prior to the Cuban Revolution due to government threats to his well-being. As I began practicing law, it was natural for me to feel good about helping families with their immigration or transition to the United States.
I found that the transition was not only a physical one, but an emotional one too. It was my desire to help people with their emotional transitions that led me to family law and collaborative law practice. So technically, I am a lawyer, but I view my role in life as a person who helps people as they transition geographically, emotionally, and spiritually to a better place.
I am an active member of the Hillsborough County Bar Association, Next Generation Divorce (a collaborative law group), and International Academy of Collaborative Professionals. As an extension of my international practice, I received a lifetime appointment as a Civil Law Notary in 2010. A Civil Law Notary is different than a Notary Public.
A Florida Civil Law Notary is a member in good standing of The Florida Bar, who has practiced law for at least five years, and who is appointed by the Secretary of State as a Civil Law Notary after completion of specialized notarial training and passage of a state-administered examination. As a Civil Law Notary I may give legal advice, draft legal documents, and exercise legal power and authority generally similar to those exercised by .
Notaries (Notario Publico, Escribano, Notar, Notaire, Latin Notary). I may authenticate or certify any document, transaction, event, condition, or occurrence by issuance of an authentic act, the contents of which are presumed correct as a matter of law.