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Immigrants, Migrants Caught In Middle Of Rural Lawyer Shortage

Unauthorized immigrants in rural areas who seek legal representation face multiple roadblocks.
David Kovaluk
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St. Louis Public Radio
Unauthorized immigrants in rural areas who seek legal representation face multiple roadblocks.

Angie Gomez has seen and heard plenty of stories about how hard it is for unauthorized immigrants and migrant farmworkers in rural areas to find lawyers to help them apply for or change their legal status.

Chad Davis of St. Louis Public Radio found getting legal help can be challenging for immigrants and migrant workers.

Gomez, the family services coordinator for Su Casa Head Start in Cobden, Illinois, emigrated from Mexico in the 1960s and became a naturalized U.S. citizen.

She said migrant farmworkers and unauthorized immigrants who are seeking legal representation don’t have lawyers readily available in their communities or those lawyers don’t speak Spanish. And traveling to larger cities to obtain legal services isn’t always feasible for several reasons — it’s too costly or might put someone at risk of deportation.

Road trip

Cobden, Illinois, is about 15 miles south of Carbondale, home of Southern Illinois University. A large portion of the town’s revenue comes from the many orchards and farms in the surrounding areas. The majority of the ag workers aren’t from here; a 2010 U.S. Census Bureau report shows that 28.6 percent of the population is of Mexican descent.

Angie Gomez is the Family Services Coordinator for Su Casa Head Start in Cobden, Illinois. She said many immigrants have to travel to larger cities to find a lawyer who speaks Spanish.
Credit Chad Davis / St. Louis Public Radio
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St. Louis Public Radio
Angie Gomez is the Family Services Coordinator for Su Casa Head Start in Cobden, Illinois. She said many immigrants have to travel to larger cities to find a lawyer who speaks Spanish.

If the farmworkers have a legal work permit, such as a federal H-2A visa, then they cannot be deported, Gomez said. But she noted that for those who don’t have one but are seeking legal status, they need to find a credible lawyer to avoid potential deportation.

The American Immigration Lawyers Association is made up of lawyers and professors who teach and practice immigration. About 100 AILA lawyers have Missouri addresses, but the majority of those lawyers are located in St. Louis and Kansas City, hours away from the southern Missouri and Illinois farms and orchards where immigrants and migrants work.

“People had to go as far as Chicago or St. Louis to find you know somebody, some attorney that’s being able to communicate with them,” Gomez said. “And so can you imagine how costly that is.”

Chicago is about 350 miles from Cobden. St. Louis is less than 120 miles away, making it a more realistic destination for the immigrants and migrant workers who need lawyers. But that’s still a long trip for people in southern Missouri and Illinois.

Ken Schmitt, an immigration lawyer in St. Louis who is an AILA member and founder of U.S. Legal Solutions, said the drive to urban areas can be a significant risk — even for immigrants who are here legally for work.

“You might not be in removal proceedings, you might have a very legitimate basis for somebody to file a petition for you,” Schmitt said. “Or you’re going to St. Louis to work on your case: You’re at risk the whole way on the road to be pulled over for whatever reason and detained and possibly turned over to (Immigrations and Customs Enforcement) for removal.”

Distance from rural clients and increasing demand for urban clients can be deter lawyers from rural immigration work, too.

“If I am driving from St. Louis or Belleville (to southern Illinois), it’s two and a half hours easy,” said Alex Enyart, an attorney for Eckert Enyart Attorneys-at-Law in Illinois. “That’s 400 bucks  one way for a visit, 800 round trip, not even including the time you’re talking to a client if you’re working on an hourly basis.”

Attorney Alex Enyart (left) speaks with migrant workers in Cobden, Illinois.
Credit Chad Davis / St. Louis Public Radio
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St. Louis Public Radio
Attorney Alex Enyart (left) speaks with migrant workers in Cobden, Illinois.

Fraud factor

Immigration lawyers have seen an increase in a particular kind of scam affecting people seeking legal services: notario fraud. That occurs when a notary claims to have the same standing and expertise as a lawyer.

“In the United States, a notary public is just authorized to notarize your signature,” said Jennifer Ibañez Whitlock, a St. Louis-based immigration lawyer and partner at law firm Whitlock and Gray. “In Latin America, a notario publico has the same rights and responsibilities as an attorney does.

"And so I see a lot of times that's sort of the scam, is that somebody gets their notary license, advertises themselves as such in English and some Spanish-speaking immigrants will believe that that person somehow has some sort of legal training when they really don’t.”

Entanglement with a notario intent on fraud can man significant consequences for a person seeking legal status. Notario fraud can even lead to the deportation of immigrants.

St. Louis Public Radio asked the Missouri Attorney General’s Office for data on how many notario fraud cases exist in Missouri. It responded that it had "no records responsive to your request."

Support and resources

Schmitt pointed to organizations that can offer assistance and advice:


Ibañez Whitlock said that while lawyers practicing immigration aren’t required to be a member of AILA, membership guarantees the individual has a license to practice law. Membership in a local bar association is another positive indicator.

“If you're not an English speaker or if you're not really internet-savvy, I tell people when you go into an office, look on the wall. Does the person have something up on the wall that looks like a law degree … maybe that will give you the sense that this person is a real lawyer and that they're not pretending to be a lawyer,” Ibañez Whitlock said.

Chad Davis is the Race and Culture Fellow at St. Louis Public Radio, a Harvest Public Media partner station. Follow him on Twitter @iamcdavis

Copyright 2018 Harvest Public Media

Chad Davis
St. Louis Public Radio