I'm Fernando Vázquez, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker based in Newark, New Jersey (license #44SC06146200), with 8 years specializing in immigration psychological evaluations. My office is located at 78 Fillmore St. in Newark's Ironbound neighborhood, and I offer both in-person appointments and telehealth evaluations for clients anywhere in the state.
New Jersey is home to approximately 2.4 million immigrants, roughly 25% of the state's total population. That makes New Jersey one of the most diverse states in the country and one where immigration legal proceedings are a daily reality for hundreds of thousands of families. I work with immigration attorneys and directly with clients across Essex County, Hudson County, Passaic County, Bergen County, and Middlesex County to provide forensic psychological evaluations that document trauma, hardship, and mental health conditions in ways that matter in court.
The Newark Immigration Court, located at 970 Broad Street, handles one of the largest immigration court backlogs in the United States. Families in Essex County, Union City, Jersey City, and across the region wait years for their cases to be heard while living with the uncertainty of unresolved immigration status. That prolonged uncertainty creates its own psychological toll, one that a skilled evaluator can document and present as part of a comprehensive case record.
New Jersey's immigrant communities are exceptionally diverse. Newark and Elizabeth have large Central American and Caribbean populations. Hudson County cities like Jersey City, Union City, North Bergen, and Hoboken include significant Cuban, Dominican, and Mexican communities. Paterson in Passaic County has one of the largest Peruvian and Middle Eastern immigrant populations in the northeast. Middlesex County, home to New Brunswick and surrounding towns, has a substantial South American and Indian immigrant population. I've worked with clients from across this full range of communities, and I understand that the cultural context shapes how trauma is experienced and expressed.
I conduct evaluations for all major immigration case types in New Jersey. Each type has distinct legal criteria, and my evaluations are written to connect clinical findings directly to those criteria.
My office in Newark's Ironbound is accessible from throughout Essex County and the broader metro area. Clients from Jersey City, Elizabeth, Paterson, New Brunswick, Trenton, Camden, Union City, North Bergen, and Hoboken regularly come in person for their evaluations. For clients in more distant parts of New Jersey, or those with transportation barriers, I offer secure telehealth evaluations that deliver the same clinical quality as an in-person session.
Being located in Newark means I bring direct knowledge of the communities I serve. I've worked with families in the Ironbound, in the North Ward, in the Oranges, in Kearny, and throughout Hudson County for years. When a client sits down with me, they're not explaining their neighborhood or their cultural background to someone unfamiliar with it. That familiarity produces better evaluations.
New Jersey's immigrant population is predominantly Spanish-speaking, with large Brazilian Portuguese-speaking communities in Newark, Elizabeth, and surrounding areas. I conduct evaluations in Spanish, Portuguese, English, and Galician. Evaluating clients in their native language is not just a convenience. It is a clinical necessity. Trauma and emotional experience do not translate cleanly through interpreters. When clients can describe their experiences in their own words, the evaluation captures more accurate clinical data and results in a stronger report.
This matters especially for VAWA and asylum cases, where the client's own account of abuse or persecution is central to the legal argument. A clinically rich description of what happened, conveyed in the client's native language, produces a fundamentally different document than one filtered through an interpreter session.
Each evaluation begins with a comprehensive clinical interview lasting two to three hours, followed by psychometric testing when clinically indicated. I use validated instruments including the PCL-5 for PTSD screening, the BDI-II for depression, the BAI for anxiety, and other measures appropriate to the specific case. I review legal documents, police reports, medical records, and other materials provided by the attorney. The final report includes detailed clinical findings, DSM-5 diagnostic analysis, discussion of the relevant legal criteria, and supporting documentation formatted for USCIS submission or immigration court proceedings.
I offer five turnaround tiers: 15 days standard, 10 days, 5 days, 2 days, and 24-hour emergency service for cases with imminent Newark Immigration Court deadlines. Reports are formatted for immediate submission.
I work with immigration attorneys throughout New Jersey, including firms in Newark, Jersey City, Elizabeth, New Brunswick, and Trenton. I understand that court deadlines in the Newark Immigration Court's backlogged docket create real time pressure, and I take that seriously. When you refer a client to me, you receive a report written to your specific case needs, a guaranteed turnaround on the tier you select, and availability to discuss findings or provide supplemental documentation if your case requires it. I am also available for expert testimony when a matter proceeds to hearing.
For attorney resources, including case intake forms and referral information, visit the For Attorneys page.
Peer-reviewed research consistently shows that professional psychological evaluations improve immigration case outcomes. A 2021 study published in the Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine analyzed 2,584 immigration cases and found 81.6% of applicants with forensic evaluations were granted relief, compared to 42.4% without evaluations (Atkinson et al., 2021).
For asylum cases specifically, a study in the Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health found 89% of asylum seekers with professional evaluations were granted asylum, compared to 37.5% without (Lustig et al., 2008).
These findings reflect what a well-executed evaluation actually does: it translates lived experience into clinical evidence that adjudicators and immigration judges can weigh. For New Jersey families navigating one of the most backlogged immigration court systems in the country, that difference matters enormously.
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If your immigration attorney has recommended a psychological evaluation, or you are looking for a New Jersey-licensed LCSW with experience in immigration cases, contact me for a free 15-minute consultation. We can discuss your case type, timeline, and whether my services are the right fit.
I see clients in person at my Newark office and via telehealth throughout New Jersey, including Newark, Jersey City, Elizabeth, Paterson, New Brunswick, Trenton, Camden, Union City, North Bergen, and Hoboken. Evaluations are conducted in English, Spanish, Portuguese, or Galician.
Page Last Updated: February 2026 | NJ LCSW License #44SC06146200 | Also Licensed in FL (#TPSW2497), TX (#115239), SC (#TLS.359.CP)
15-minute call. No charge. I’ll tell you if an evaluation fits your case , and which type. Attorney inquiries answered within 24 hours.