Épisodes

  • Filing a Mandamus Lawsuit Without an Attorney (Pro Se): Risks and Considerations
    Jan 8 2026

    Can you file a mandamus lawsuit without an attorney? This episode provides an honest assessment of pro se litigation in federal court, including what is involved, what can go wrong, and how to evaluate whether self-representation makes sense for your situation.

    Legal representation costs money, and not everyone can afford an attorney. Some people consider representing themselves to save on legal fees. In this episode, we explain what pro se means and the right to self-representation in federal court, why courts hold pro se litigants to the same procedural standards as attorneys, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure including pleading, service, deadlines, and motions, common pro se mistakes like service defects, missed deadlines, and deficient complaints, the complexity of drafting a mandamus complaint and responding to motions to dismiss, legal research skills including finding cases, citing authority, and constructing arguments, the time commitment and stress of self-representation, cost-benefit analysis comparing attorney fees to the risk of dismissal, middle-ground options like unbundled services, flat fees, and payment plans, and tips for pro se litigants including learning procedure, studying successful filings, and meticulous documentation.

    This is legal education, not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a qualified immigration attorney about your specific situation.

    Learn more at mandamuslawyers.com/podcast

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    16 min
  • What a Mandamus Lawsuit Cannot Do: Understanding the Limitations
    Jan 8 2026

    Mandamus is a powerful tool, but it is not a magic wand. This episode explains what mandamus lawsuits cannot do so you can set realistic expectations and make informed decisions about litigation.

    Understanding the limitations of mandamus helps you evaluate whether it is right for your situation. In this episode, we cover why mandamus compels a decision but cannot guarantee approval, why courts cannot order the agency to approve your application, how mandamus cannot change eligibility requirements or fix substantive case weaknesses, discretionary decisions and what mandamus can and cannot address, visa bulletin backlogs and why mandamus does not speed up priority date waiting, security checks and when they justify delay versus when they do not, consular nonreviewability and the limitations for U.S. embassy and consulate cases, why mandamus cannot recover monetary damages for harm caused by the delay, how mandamus cannot change immigration law or agency policy, applicant-caused delays and why you must fulfill your obligations first, and the value of mandamus despite these limitations in providing certainty over indefinite limbo.

    This is legal education, not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a qualified immigration attorney about your specific situation.

    Learn more at mandamuslawyers.com/podcast

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    15 min
  • When Is It Too Early to File a Mandamus Lawsuit?
    Jan 7 2026

    Can you file a mandamus lawsuit too early? And do USCIS posted processing times determine whether your delay is unreasonable? This episode explains the timing considerations for mandamus litigation and clears up common misconceptions.

    Timing matters in mandamus cases. Filing too early can result in dismissal, but waiting too long means unnecessary months or years of delay. In this episode, we cover why courts do not set bright-line rules for timing and why there is no magic number of months or years, how filing too early can result in dismissal and what that means for your case, why USCIS processing times are not legal standards and courts are not bound by them, how processing times are backward-looking estimates rather than benchmarks for reasonableness, using processing times as evidence for your case rather than against it, factors suggesting it may be too early including short delays, ongoing agency activity, and no hardship, factors suggesting it is time to file including extended inactivity, failed administrative efforts, and documented harm, statutory timelines like 8 U.S.C. § 1447(b) for naturalization and the I-829 benchmark for EB-5, strategic considerations for balancing risk of dismissal versus continued waiting, and working with an attorney to evaluate timing.

    This is legal education, not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a qualified immigration attorney about your specific situation.

    Learn more at mandamuslawyers.com/podcast

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    13 min
  • What to Try Before Filing a Mandamus Lawsuit
    Jan 6 2026

    Should you try to resolve your immigration delay through administrative channels before filing a federal lawsuit? This episode covers the options available and how documenting your efforts strengthens your case if litigation becomes necessary.

    Mandamus litigation is effective, but it is not always the first step. In this episode, we explain why attempting administrative remedies before litigation is advisable, how pre-suit efforts create a record that supports your mandamus case, why exhaustion requirements do not formally apply to delay cases, USCIS case inquiries and how to submit them effectively, USCIS Contact Center calls and service requests along with their limitations, in-person field office appointments and when they help, congressional assistance and how to request help from your senator or representative, the USCIS Ombudsman and submitting case assistance requests, expedite requests and the USCIS criteria for approval, documenting everything and building a chronological log of inquiries and responses, and when to stop trying administrative options and consider litigation.

    This is legal education, not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a qualified immigration attorney about your specific situation.

    Learn more at mandamuslawyers.com

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    13 min
  • How Long Does a Mandamus Lawsuit Take to Resolve?
    Jan 6 2026

    How long will it take to get a decision after you file a mandamus lawsuit? This episode walks through the typical timeline, key procedural stages, and factors that affect how quickly immigration delay cases reach resolution.

    If you have already been waiting years for USCIS to act, you want to know what kind of timeline to expect from litigation. In this episode, we cover the 60-day government response period and why it is often extended to 90 days or more, why many cases resolve within weeks of filing before the government even responds, what happens when the agency adjudicates during litigation, contested cases involving motions to dismiss, briefing schedules, and court rulings, factors that affect timeline including case strength, court docket, and application type, how settlement works and when it typically occurs, realistic expectations with 30 to 90 days for quick resolutions and 6 to 12 months or more for contested cases, comparing the lawsuit timeline to indefinite waiting without litigation, questions to ask your attorney about timing and communication, and why a structured process with deadlines beats open-ended uncertainty.

    This is legal education, not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a qualified immigration attorney about your specific situation.

    Learn more at mandamuslawyers.com/podcast

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    11 min
  • The Three Elements of Mandamus: Clear Right, Clear Duty, No Other Remedy
    Jan 5 2026

    What must you prove to obtain a writ of mandamus in federal court? This episode breaks down the three traditional legal elements required for mandamus relief and how they apply to immigration delay cases.

    Understanding these three elements helps you evaluate your own case before filing. In this episode, we explain the first element, a clear right to relief, which means demonstrating you filed a valid application and are entitled to have it adjudicated. We cover the second element, a clear nondiscretionary duty, and why immigration agencies have a mandatory obligation to decide applications under the INA and APA. We discuss the third element, no other adequate remedy, and why delay cases satisfy this requirement when there is no decision to appeal. We also explain why administrative exhaustion does not apply the same way in inaction cases, how the three elements work together as a threshold for mandamus jurisdiction, why the real fight is usually over reasonableness under the TRAC factors, how the government typically responds to these elements, and how to use this three-element framework to evaluate your own situation.

    This is legal education, not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a qualified immigration attorney about your specific situation.

    Learn more at mandamuslawyers.com/podcast

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    13 min
  • Will Suing the Government Hurt My Immigration Case?
    Jan 5 2026

    Will USCIS retaliate if you sue them? Will filing a lawsuit hurt your chances of approval? This episode addresses the most common fears about mandamus lawsuits and explains why the myths are not supported by evidence.

    The fear of government retaliation is the biggest barrier preventing people from pursuing mandamus litigation. In this episode, we tackle these concerns directly. Topics include why there is no evidence of government retaliation against applicants who file suit, the separation between litigation (DOJ and AUSA) and adjudication (USCIS officers), why filing a lawsuit is not a negative factor in good moral character analysis, how adjudicating officers decide cases based on eligibility rather than pending litigation, why mandamus lawsuits typically accelerate cases rather than slow them down, the high success rate of mandamus litigation and why agencies prefer to adjudicate, what "losing" a mandamus case actually means and the limited downside risk, why bureaucratic delays often have nothing to do with the merits of your case, cultural and psychological barriers to filing suit, and when caution is warranted based on timing, case evaluation, and eligibility concerns.

    This is legal education, not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a qualified immigration attorney about your specific situation.

    Learn more at mandamuslawyers.com/podcast

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    13 min
  • Government Response to Mandamus Lawsuits: How the Government Responds to Delay Lawsuits
    Jan 4 2026

    You filed a mandamus lawsuit against USCIS. Now what? This episode explains how the government responds and the different ways immigration delay cases typically resolve.

    Once your complaint is served, the litigation enters a new phase with several possible directions. In this episode, we cover the 60-day government response deadline and the role of the Assistant U.S. Attorney (AUSA), why filing a lawsuit often prompts USCIS to adjudicate the application before even responding, what happens when a case is dismissed as moot because the agency acted, government responses including answers and motions to dismiss, common government defenses like TRAC factors arguments, national security, and background checks, how settlement works in mandamus cases with negotiated adjudication deadlines, what happens when the plaintiff wins and the court orders the agency to act, what happens when a motion to dismiss is granted and the appeals process, why trials are rare in mandamus litigation, and realistic timelines and expectations for case resolution.

    This is legal education, not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a qualified immigration attorney about your specific situation.

    Learn more at mandamuslawyers.com/podcast

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    12 min