Late Evening & Weekend Appointments Available!

Our Locations

118-21 Queens Boulevard Suite 409
Forest Hills, New York 11375


104-05, Liberty Avenue
Ozone Park, New York 11417


Free Consultation*

Call Us 718-263-5999


*Free Initial Consultation is limited to in-person consultation by appointment only at one of our offices.

Gehi And Associates

New York City Immigration law firm serving clients since 2001


Over the years, the deportation attorneys at Gehi & Associates have helped numerous families in resolving removal cases, including detention. If your relative or friend is in immigration custody or is facing deportation, the attorneys at Gehi & Associates can assist you in trying to obtain an immigration bond, fight for your Green Card before the Immigration Judge or even successfully fighting for your rights in the Federal Court.

Naresh M. Gehi, the principal attorney of the firm, has been cited as an expert immigration lawyer by Channel 11, WPIX News, and has appeared on New York 1 TV. Additionally, Mr. Gehi has handled terrorism related immigration cases and has been a speaker at the American Immigration Lawyers Association, as well as a panelist on the Ask the Experts Panel at the American Immigration Lawyers Association. Mr. Gehi, and his firm have a proven track record of handling extremely complex immigration matters of every type. Our immigration attorneys are highly experienced in handling these multifaceted immigration law matters.

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Call 718-263-5999 for a free personal consultation.
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Immigration & Deportation Issues

Specializing in complex Federal immigration litigation and serious deportation cases, over the years the deportation attorneys at Gehi & Associates have helped numerous families resolve removal and immigration detention cases.

The practice of the firm includes all aspects of immigration including accusations of terrorism, political/religious asylum cases, employment-based immigration, entertainers visas, investors visas, E visas, L visas, F-1 student visas, M-1 visas, religious worker visas, battered spouse petitions, Temporary Protected Status, work permit, RFEs (Request for Evidence) etc.

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Family & Labor Law Issues

Gehi & Associates regularly assists clients through the murky and tumultuous waters of New York divorce and related family law matter including contested and uncontested divorces; child support, child custody, visitations and order of protections.

Gehi & Associates can also assist you with your labor law matter including unpaid overtime, minimum wage requirements, employee discrimination, and work places abuses.

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Bankruptcy Issues

Sometimes bad things happen to good people. Most people who borrow money do so fully intending to pay it back. But sometimes unexpected misfortunes – such as job loses, accidents and sudden illnesses, business failures, deaths in the family, and so on – can leave a person with bills that they just cannot afford to pay, no matter how hard they try. Bankruptcy exists as a way for the “honest but unfortunate debtor” to become free of their debts and start over.

Our skilled Attorneys

And Staff

Need some legal assistance? Let’s have a chat!

Please feel free to ask us any queries, Just mail us or directly call us to ask any legal matter, our Immigration attorney helps you along with the case at any stage and can elaborate how to deal with the case successfully in a short time.

What Clients Have to Say About Us

Quality. Responsiveness. Results.

Latest News

Critical Matters. Critical Thinking.

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SHIITE ORG, YEMENI PARENTS FILE LATEST TRAVEL BAN CHALLENGE

The U.S. arm of a Shiite Muslim organization and a Yemeni husband and wife were the latest to challenge President Donald Trump’s revised executive order banning people from six Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States, alleging March 31 that the order is outright religious discrimination.

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2ND CIRC. SAYS REMOVAL NOT PUNISHMENT IN DEPORTATION CASE

The Second Circuit on March 28 declined to revive an Ecuadorian man’s petition to escape removal proceedings, ruling that immigration judges needn’t weigh whether deportation is “proportional” to an immigrant’s actions because removal isn’t a punishment.