Edwin Palacio
Defense You Deserve
The attorney Edwin Palacio represents people facing criminal charges in Washington D.C., those facing removal before the Executive Office for Immigration Review, and those seeking to file immigration petitions before United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.
Originally from Miami, Florida. Edwin attended Florida International University where he earned a Bachelors Degree in Political Science. Edwin attended Law school at the University of South Carolina School of Law, where he earned his J.D.. Edwin is admitted to practice law in D.C. and South Carolina. He began his legal career as an Assistant Public Defender in 2018 and handled a variety of cases, from minor misdemeanors up to felony charges.
Edwin later worked as a Removal Defense Attorney in Virginia at a non-profit organization. Edwin has successfully represented clients facing removal/deportation proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review, those filing for Asylum, Adjustment of Status, U visas, DACA, VAWA, petition for relatives and naturalization petitions. In 2022, Edwin founded the law firm Palacio Law, PLLC.
Areas of Practice
Criminal Defense
DUI/DWI cases
Felonies
Misdemeanor
Parole & Probation
Immigration Law
- Criminal Law
- Drug Crimes, Expungement, Fraud, Gun Crimes, Internet Crimes, Theft, Violent Crimes
- Immigration Law
- Asylum, Citizenship, Deportation Defense, Family Visas, Green Cards, Marriage & Fiancé(e) Visas
- Zoom
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Free Consultation
We provide a free, 30 minute consult to discuss and evaluate your pending criminal case. Any immigration case consults are $100.00 for a 45 minute consult, and up to 1 hour for immigration court matters. - Credit Cards Accepted
- District of Columbia
- District of Columbia Bar
- South Carolina
- South Carolina Bar
- English: Spoken, Written
- Spanish: Spoken, Written
- University of South Carolina School of Law
- J.D.
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- American Immigration Lawyers Association
- - Current
- Q. i was charged with a misdemeanor DUI in 2010. i received a suspended sentence, international student that left the US
- A: There is a possibility you may have an active warrant for a parole/probation violation due to absconding from supervision. You should contact the DC Superior Court Information Center and ask if there is an active warrant out. If you had prior counsel, you should contact them and inform them of your situation.