
Ana Guzman is the Senior Immigration Paralegal at Rose Law Group, pc. Ana brings over 20 years’ experience as an immigration paralegal to our growing immigration practice.
Ana started her career at Friendly House, a nonprofit organization where she served at first as a legal assistant, and then as a community outreach representative and ultimately a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) accredited representative who appeared on behalf of clients in INS and USCIS appointments.
Following her tenure at Friendly House, Ana went on to be the supervising immigration paralegal at two of the largest immigration law firms in the Phoenix area. Over the course of her career Ana has gained incredible experience maintaining multiple attorney dockets, researching caselaw, drafting letters to clients and various government agencies, preparing applications of relief before the court, assembling supporting documentations, drafting motions to the Immigration Court and the BIA, requesting Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) reports, interacting with the immigration court for clients, responding to the needs of clients through phone calls, emails, and office appointments, and ensuring deadlines are successfully met and dockets are precisely calendared and maintained.
Ana is fully bilingual in English and Spanish and as an immigrant to the United States herself, Ana takes pride in her experience serving the needs of immigrants to the United States in Arizona and beyond.
In The News

Ask Rose Law Group Immigration Department Chairman Darius Amiri: Can CBP really search my phone?
By Darius Amiri, Rose Law Group Chair of Immigration Law Many green card holders and non-immigrant visa holders have been reaching out to us concerned about reports of persons being denied, deported, or turned away from Ports of Entry and airports after US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) went through their phones and mobile devices to review their content. The

Darius Amiri, immigration department chairman at Rose Law Group, talks to Downtown Devil about the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 and how it could affect Arizona
By Natalie Ogami | Downtown Devil The Trump administration announced re-enactment of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to target the “invasion of the United States by Tren de Aragua” on March 14. Despite being wartime legislation, neither the U.S. nor Venezuela have officially declared war on each other. Three planes carrying more than 200 migrants landed in El Salvador

Trump to auction off citizenship via his ‘gold cards’; Darius Amiri, chairman of Rose Law Group’s immigration department, explains
By Kelly Rissman | Independent President Donald Trump announced a new path to U.S. citizenship: a pricey gold card. The U.S. is going to “sell” gold cards for $5 million, Trump announced in the Oval Office Tuesday. “We’re going to be putting a price on that card of about $5 million and that’s going to give you [permanent resident] Green Card privileges, plus it’s going to be
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