Immigration psychological evaluations for legal matters

Objective, evidence-based psychological evaluations for immigration-related legal proceedings.

An abstract illustration featuring a silhouette of a person's head with a brain, a balance scale, and geometric shapes in black, gold, and beige colors.

Overview

What Immigration Psychological Evaluations Accomplish

Immigration psychological evaluations are clinical assessments that examine an individual’s psychological history, trauma exposure, symptoms, functioning, and relevant life circumstances as they relate to an immigration matter.

These evaluations provide objective, evidence-based documentation of psychological factors relevant to visa petitions, asylum claims, hardship waivers, and removal defense cases.

For attorneys

Evaluations provide clinically grounded documentation to help attorneys and adjudicators understand the psychological and functional issues relevant to a case.

For Clients and Families

Evaluations offer a structured clinical assessment of emotional, psychological, and functional concerns connected to the immigration matter.

Six evaluation types available

Each immigration matter requires a careful, case-specific psychological evaluation.

Clinical domains examined

Each assessment addresses specific psychological factors relevant to immigration proceedings.

  • Mental health and psychiatric history

  • Trauma exposure and psychological impact

  • Family relationships and support systems

  • Functional capacity and daily impairment

  • Medical history and health considerations

  • Cultural context and immigration-related stressors

Make an enquiry >

How evaluations are conducted

The evaluation process is structured, clinically informed, and designed to produce clear documentation for immigration-related legal proceedings.

Step One: Consultation & Intake
Initial discussion of referral questions, case background, timelines, and available documentation.

Step Two: Clinical Interview
A comprehensive clinical interview exploring relevant history, symptoms, trauma exposure, current functioning, and case-specific concerns.

Step Three: Assessment & Records Review
Supporting records are reviewed, and psychological measures may be used when clinically appropriate.

Step Four: Written Report
A professionally organized report is completed, typically within 1–2 weeks after the clinical interview and receipt of relevant documents.

Why attorneys choose this practice

Objective, evidence-based evaluations informed by trauma-sensitive interviewing, culturally responsive assessment, and over 20 years of clinical assessment experience.

Reports are clearly organized, professionally written, and designed to help attorneys and adjudicators understand the psychological and functional issues relevant to each case.

Key points:

  • Objective clinical findings

  • Trauma-informed assessment

  • Culturally responsive interviewing

  • Clear reports for legal proceedings

  • Responsive communication

  • 1–2 week turnaround

Background

Clinical Expertise Grounded in Assessment Experience

Dr. Anthony D. DiNardo III, Psy.D is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist with over 20 years of experience in psychological assessment, diagnostic interviewing, and clinical documentation. His advanced clinical training includes UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute and Harbor-UCLA Medical Center. His current practice focuses on immigration-related psychological evaluations and clear, evidence-based reporting for legal proceedings.

Bullets:

  • Licensed Clinical Psychologist

  • UCLA and Harbor-UCLA trained

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about immigration psychological evaluations