AP
June 4, 2015
A
California attorney who successfully fought a legal battle to practice
law despite his immigration status got his green card Thursday and can
now live in the U.S. legally
as well.
Sergio
Garcia, 38, first applied for permanent U.S. residency in 1994 at the
age of 17 after his family moved from Mexico to California.
"It's
an incredible relief," Garcia said after picking up the drivers'
license-like card from his post office box in Chico, north of
Sacramento.
The
green card was granted on the heels of the law license he obtained in
2014 after a five-year legal and political battle that included
opposition from the Obama administration
and a favorable ruling in January from the California Supreme Court.
The
license was granted after Gov. Jerry Brown signed a specially crafted
bill passed by the Legislature to let Garcia practice law.
Garcia
was thought to be the first immigrant in the country illegally to be
granted a law license. He now represents car accident victims and
settled his first legal case
on Wednesday.
A
New York appeals court on Thursday granted a law license to Cesar
Vargas, whose mother brought him to the United States from Mexico when
he was 5.
Even
with his law license, Garcia faced obstacles. Without the green card,
he couldn't work for a law firm or partner with other attorneys on
cases. Many potential clients
were wary of hiring a lawyer who could be arrested and deported.
Garcia
says he is seeking U.S. citizenship, which would give him the right to
vote, serve on a jury or work for the federal government.
He
said he still gets an occasional threatening email from strangers upset
that he is practicing law. He hopes his new immigration status will
silence critics.
"I'm
delighted for him," said Larry DeSha, a retired State Bar prosecutor
who opposed the granting of a law license to Garcia while he lived in
the country without permission.
"He worked hard and waited too long."
DeSha said he has no issue with Garcia practicing law now that he's in the country legally.
Garcia
arrived with his parents in California when he was an infant and
returned to Mexico when he was 9. When he was 17, his family moved to
Chico, where his father —
a naturalized U.S. citizen — operates a beekeeping business.
After
graduating from Cal Northern School of Law in Chico, Garcia passed the
Bar exam in 2009 but wasn't able to practice law until 2014, when he
opened an office in Chico.
On Wednesday, he won a $25,000 insurance payout for a woman hurt in an auto accident and collected his first payment.
"I'm on a roll," he said. "My girlfriend and I are going to a steakhouse and I'm ordering a lobster tail."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com



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