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Lincoln-Goldfinch Law-https://www.LincolnGoldfinch.com

Lincoln-Goldfinch Law

Established in 2015, Lincoln-Goldfinch Law provides immigration and bankruptcy services from their offices in Austin Texas. The firm''s founder, Kate Lincoln-Goldfinch has been guiding people all over the US and around the globe through the immigration process so they could live and work in the US without fear of deportation. Her and her team''s mission is to "bring peace to immigrant families", their dedication to this mission is unparalleled.The firm also proudly offers bankruptcy services to their local communities for those who need help with chapter 7 or chapter 13 bankruptcies.Call us today to learn more about our values and services. We provide convenient and free over-the-phone or Zoom evaluations for anyone with an immigration or bankruptcy matter.Lincoln-Goldfinch Law1005 E 40th StAustin, TX 78751(855) 502-0555https://www.LincolnGoldfinch.com


Krystal Gomez

Assistant Legal Director/Attorney| I grew up with my family straddling the border with one foot in Brownsville, Texas and the other in Matamoros, Tamaulipas. My paternal grandfather was a Mexican Citizen who joined the U.S. Army and fought in the Korean War. Later, after earning his U.S. citizenship, he worked on the puente of the International Bridge collecting tolls from border crossers, but kept his small ranchito outside of Matamoros that we visited on weekends and for family gatherings. My maternal grandmother, also a Mexican citizen, had some of her 14 children in Brownsville and some in Matamoros. Her husband was a migrant worker, and rather than give birth alone when he was out of the state, she would go back home to Matamoros to be with her parents for those births. As a result, my aunts and uncles have a wide variety of immigration statuses in the United States. Migration and fluid binationality are concepts that shaped my youth and I took the ease of it all for granted. Then in 1993, when I was about 11 years old, things began to change. The border was seen as a dangerous area and every presidential candidate since then has offered their solution to the “border security crisis”. This relatively new idea of a “hard” border, one with walls, checkpoints and paramilitary officers interrogating and harassing crossers, shocks me, and I know that it only serves to put lives at risk and separate families like mine. I knew from the time I left home for college that I wanted to spend my life fighting for the rights of border crossers. I graduated from UT-Austin in 2005 with my bachelor’s degree, double majoring in Mexican-American Studies and Government. In law school, I helped open the San Antonio office of the Equal Justice Center, helping with the recovery of unpaid wages for people regardless of their immigration status, and volunteered with the St. Mary’s University Law School Immigration and Human Rights Clinic. I graduated from St. Mary’s Law School in 2010 and received a Texas Access to Justice Fellowship to continue working with the Equal Justice Center, but this time back home in Brownsville. In 2011, I accepted a position with the ACLU of Texas to open their Border Office and to work on Immigrants’ Rights Law and Policy. While with the ACLU, I had the opportunity to visit immigration detention centers and federal immigrant prisons, and interview detainees about the conditions of their confinement; testify at Congressional briefings arguing for the decriminalization of migrants; write Amicus Briefs about the unconstitutionality of cross-border shootings by Border Patrol agents; sue Border Patrol agents for unconstitutional body cavity searches; and testify against anti-immigrant bills at the Texas Legislature. While I loved my time with the ACLU doing “impact work”, finding resolution for those cases took years, and I was ready to help people with their immigration issues directly.