About Mason Immigration Law Office

Bar Membership

Wallie Mason is an attorney licensed by the District of Columbia and Maryland State Bars. She is licensed to represent clients in US Immigration matters in all 50 states and territories of the United States.

Over two decades of helping others with their legal matters

Before dedicating her law practice exclusively to Immigration Law in 2001, Ms. Mason was an International Human Rights Attorney. She has prosecuted cases against the Guatemalan and Haitian governments before the OAS Human Rights Commission in Washington, DC and has authored and presented reports documenting torture before the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in Geneva, Switzerland.

As an International Human Rights attorney, Ms. Mason authored numerous articles regarding the impact of human rights abuses on the lives of victims and their communities.

Since making the decision to focus exclusively on Immigration Law, Ms. Mason has continued her commitment to the promotion of human rights. She regularly represents refugees seeking asylum in the US, including recent clients from Guatemala, Armenia, Iran, Kenya, Somalia and Syria.

Ms. Mason has been a Visiting Lecturer at Yale Law School, the Washington College of Law at American University, the University of Pennsylvania Law School and her alma mater, Notre Dame University’s London Law Centre.

Publications

  1. “The Making of A Human Rights Activist”, by KC Swanson
    National Journal
  2. THE UNITED STATES EMBARGO AGAINST CUBA: LEGAL
    ASPECTS OF THE RESTRICTIONS ON SALES OF
    PHARMACEUTICAL PRODUCTS, AS SET FORTH IN THE
    CUBAN DEMOCRACY ACT OF 1992
  3. New American Media, News Report Quoting Wallie Mason
    “Syrians Flee Violence At Home, Find Refuge in Southern California”
  4. Immigration Lawyer Wallie Mason ’87 Quoted in New America Media on Syrian Refugees in California, Ms. Mason’s comments on Syrian refugees in California
  5. “Morrissey has strong bond with Latinos”, by Jennifer Torres
    Article quoting Ms. Mason on similarity between Mexican and Irish
    immigrant experiences