Immigration Legal Support Focused on Evidence, Strategy, and Deadlines
Arvian Law Firm helps individuals, families, professionals, entrepreneurs, and employers with U.S. immigration cases. Each case starts with the client’s goal, immigration history, deadlines, and available evidence. From there, the firm identifies the legal basis, reviews risk factors, prepares supporting documents, and prepares the case for the appropriate process: a USCIS filing, NVC processing, consular review, or immigration court when needed.
- Who leads the practice: attorney Vitalii Maliuk, Missouri Bar No. 73573, admitted to practice in Missouri on 08/09/2021; the public Missouri Bar directory lists his current standing as Good Standing.
- How clients are supported: clients work with the attorney and immigration support team, including paralegal, intake, document-preparation, and client-support staff. This keeps legal review, evidence collection, document updates, and communication organized throughout the case.
- Geography of service: immigration law is a federal practice area, so the firm represents clients in immigration matters across all 50 U.S. states; offices are listed in California and Missouri.
- Types of clients: families, visa and green card applicants, professionals with documented achievements, employers, entrepreneurs, asylum applicants, and clients with prior denials, status issues, court deadlines, or other complicated immigration histories.
Before preparing forms, the firm reviews the facts behind the case. Even within the same category, the outcome may turn on details such as prior entries and exits, status violations, family changes, education, work experience, publications, recommendation letters, tax records, prior denials, Visa Bulletin timing, or the completeness of a response to a USCIS request. The team reviews the record first, then connects the forms, supporting documents, and legal arguments to the standard required for the selected category.
What types of cases the firm handles
Arvian Law Firm works on standard filings and cases that require a careful explanation of difficult facts: prior denials, status violations, gaps in a personal history, urgent deadlines, incomplete documents, or USCIS requests. The team checks whether forms, dates, supporting documents, and legal arguments are consistent with each other. Every statement in an application should be supported by documents and should not conflict with the client’s broader immigration history.
- family immigration, marriage-based petitions, green cards for relatives, consular processing, and adjustment of status;
- employment-based immigration, work visas, petitions for professionals, entrepreneurs, employers, and employees;
- cases supported by evidence of professional achievements, qualifications, experience, publications, awards, and recommendation letters;
- naturalization, extension or change of status, responses to RFE, NOID, and other USCIS notices;
- deportation defense, immigration court proceedings, appeals, motions, and work with complex immigration histories.
How the firm works on a case
- Initial legal assessment. The team reviews the client’s goal, current status, entry history, prior filings, deadlines, and possible limitations.
- Legal strategy. The attorney determines the most appropriate route: a USCIS filing, consular processing through NVC, immigration court procedure, response to a government request, or rebuilding the evidence after a weak or incomplete filing.
- Evidence preparation. Documents are reviewed for completeness, dates, translations, logical inconsistencies, and connection to the criteria of the selected category.
- Filing, updates, and follow-up. The client receives a structured filing package and support with government requests, interviews, notices, document updates, or changes that affect the case.
Clients can verify the attorney’s license and public bar standing and see how the firm organizes each case: legal review, evidence preparation, filing, follow-up, and communication. No immigration lawyer can guarantee an outcome, so the firm focuses on what can be controlled: strategy, documentation, deadlines, consistency, and preparation for review by an officer, consulate, or court.









