Fernando Vazquez, LCSW documents exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to qualifying U.S. citizen and LPR relatives. EOIR-ready reports built for immigration court. Rush turnaround available when hearing dates are set.
Under 8 USC 1229b(b)(1)(D), a respondent seeking Cancellation of Removal must demonstrate that removal would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to a qualifying U.S. citizen or LPR spouse, parent, or child. This is a high bar. The BIA has made clear it requires hardship substantially beyond what is normally expected from family separation. The psychological evaluation is where you build that case.
The hardship standard focuses on the qualifying relative, not the respondent.
The evaluation interviews and assesses the qualifying relative directly: the USC spouse, the LPR parent, or the USC child. Their psychological condition, functional impact, and likely deterioration upon removal are the legal core of the case.
Judges look for specificity: generic claims of hardship rarely succeed.
A strong 42B evaluation documents individual clinical findings, validated test scores, documented history, and a clear analysis of the specific consequences of this respondent's removal on this qualifying relative.
The evaluation goes beyond a generic hardship letter. It builds a clinical picture of the qualifying relative grounded in a structured interview, validated instruments, and a direct analysis of removal consequences.
The report is a comprehensive forensic document, typically 15-25 pages, structured for immigration court submission. It connects clinical findings directly to the exceptional and extremely unusual hardship standard.
42B evaluations are more intensive than standard immigration evaluations. The qualifying relative must be separately interviewed, additional instruments administered, and the removal consequence analysis requires detailed clinical reasoning. Contact the office as soon as a hearing date is set.
| Tier | Turnaround | Fee |
|---|---|---|
| 48-Hour Delivery | 48 hours from intake clearance | $3,000 |
| 24-Hour Delivery | 24 hours from intake clearance | $5,000 |
Fee includes the qualifying relative interview, respondent interview (when applicable), psychometric testing, collateral document review, and complete court-ready report. Contact the office to confirm availability before committing to a hearing date where possible.
Contact the office as early as possible. 42B evaluations require coordinating with the qualifying relative directly. Rush capacity is limited.
Include your hearing date. Rush slots are booked first-come, first-served. Response within 24-48 hours.
All 42B evaluation interviews, including the qualifying relative interview, are conducted via secure HIPAA-compliant telehealth. Immigration courts and EOIR accept telehealth evaluations. This matters for cases where the qualifying relative is in a different location from the respondent.
If respondent and qualifying relative are in different locations, both can be interviewed separately via telehealth within the same timeline.
Spanish, Portuguese, and Galician speakers interviewed directly. No interpreter introduces no reliability questions into the clinical record.
Telehealth evaluations use identical clinical protocols and produce reports with the same evidentiary weight as in-person assessments.
In-person evaluation at 78 Fillmore St., Newark, NJ 07105 for clients who prefer face-to-face assessment.
Recently successful 42B evaluations completed for EOIR proceedings in the Newark Immigration Court. Fernando Vazquez, LCSW provides evaluations exclusively for immigration proceedings and does not provide therapy or treatment to evaluation clients, preserving evaluator neutrality.
Under 8 USC 1229b(b)(1)(D), the respondent must show that removal would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to a qualifying U.S. citizen or LPR spouse, parent, or child. The BIA has set a high threshold. The evaluation is where you document that the hardship on the qualifying relative is substantially beyond what family separation normally causes.
The primary subject of a 42B evaluation is the qualifying relative, not the respondent. The qualifying relative is interviewed directly and assessed using validated clinical instruments. The evaluation documents their current psychological condition, functional impairment, and the specific consequences removal would have on their mental health and wellbeing. The respondent may also be interviewed to provide contextual information about the family relationship and the qualifying relative's history.
The most useful documents are the Notice to Appear, any prior psychological or medical records for the qualifying relative, school records if the qualifying relative is a child or if there are USC children at issue, and any supporting declarations from treating providers. You do not need all of this to schedule. Share what is available and the evaluation proceeds from there.
42B evaluations are delivered in either 48 hours ($3,000) or 24 hours ($5,000) from the moment intake is cleared. Intake clearance means the client has completed forms and signed consent, the attorney has provided all case documents, and no factors are present that require a longer clinical process. Rush capacity is limited and booked in order of inquiry. Contact the office as soon as the hearing date is set.
42B evaluations are offered in two delivery tiers. 48-hour delivery is $3,000. 24-hour rush delivery is $5,000. Both tiers include the qualifying relative interview, respondent interview as needed, psychometric testing, collateral document review, and the complete court-ready report. Every case is screened at intake to confirm feasibility before the delivery clock starts. The fee reflects delivery speed, not methodology, the forensic standard is the same at both tiers.
Yes, as long as the qualifying relative is in one of the four licensed states: New Jersey, Florida, Texas, or South Carolina. All interviews are conducted via secure HIPAA-compliant telehealth. Immigration courts and EOIR accept telehealth evaluations. The qualifying relative and respondent can be interviewed separately if they are in different locations.
Yes. Both address hardship to qualifying relatives, but 42B is adjudicated by an immigration judge in EOIR proceedings, while I-601 and I-601A hardship waivers go through USCIS. The legal standard for 42B ("exceptional and extremely unusual hardship") is considered by courts to be a higher bar than the "extreme hardship" standard for I-601 waivers. The 42B evaluation is formatted for immigration court, includes testimony-ready language, and is structured to support cross-examination if the judge requests expert testimony.
Contact Fernando Vazquez, LCSW for a 42B Cancellation of Removal psychological evaluation. Rush turnaround available. Serving attorneys and qualifying relatives in New Jersey, Florida, Texas, and South Carolina.
78 Fillmore St., Newark, NJ 07105 • info@fvrpsych.com • Telehealth available in NJ, FL, TX, SC