Asylum case submission and interview
I contacted US Quest and worked with Ekaterina to prepare my asylum case for submission to USCIS, as well as to prepare for my interview. My case was complicated by the fact that after nine years of waiting for the interview to be scheduled, the documents I had originally submitted were lost, and the case essentially had to be rebuilt from scratch.
Ekaterina and Marina helped me fully restore the materials, properly structure my story, and present it in a clear and professional way, following all the necessary requirements. They helped me focus on exactly what needed to be included in the case, without any unnecessary or irrelevant information. After that, we prepared and resubmitted the case to USCIS.
I especially want to highlight the interview preparation. It included two mock interviews with former USCIS officers who had direct experience working with asylum cases and conducting these types of interviews. During the first preparation session, we went through my case in great detail, discussed possible questions, the proper logic of the answers, and what exactly the officer needed to hear before I left the interview room. The second mock interview was conducted entirely in English with another former USCIS officer, in the format of a full real-life interview from beginning to end.
Thanks to this thorough preparation, I arrived at my actual USCIS interview feeling calm and confident. My interview lasted only about an hour and a half, and I received the decision fairly quickly. My asylum case was approved.
I am extremely grateful to Ekaterina and her team for their serious, attentive, and highly professional work. Their deep expertise, knowledge of the process, and precise approach were very clear throughout the entire preparation. There was no unnecessary information and no “fluff” — only detailed attention to every aspect of my specific case. I am very glad that I chose Ekaterina and US Quest, and I confidently recommend them to anyone who needs professional assistance with an asylum case.







