Co-counsel in DHS v. Regents of the University of California; first undocumented attorney to present oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court; DACA preserved.
Luis Cortes Romero
Luis is one of the most recognized DACA attorneys in the United States. In November 2019, as co-counsel in DHS v. Regents of the University of California, he became the first undocumented attorney to sit at counsel table before the U.S. Supreme Court — second chair to Ted Olson — and helped strike down the Trump administration's decision to end DACA.
I know this fight because I have lived it.
As a partner leading Novo Legal Group's Seattle office, I focus exclusively on immigration litigation. With extensive experience in trial and appellate cases, I have tackled a wide variety of immigration-related matters — constitutional issues, immigration detention challenges, the immigration consequences of criminal convictions, and waivers of inadmissibility. My work extends to high-profile constitutional litigation involving equal-protection and due-process claims, as well as representation in governmental investigations.
I am a DACA recipient — born in Mexico and brought to the United States at age one, I grew up undocumented in the San Francisco Bay Area. I served as co-counsel in the landmark case DHS v. Regents of the University of California, which led the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down the Trump administration's decision to end DACA. The PBS VOCES documentary "From Here / From There" tells the story of my journey from undocumented child to Supreme Court advocate.
At Novo Legal Group, I remain committed to impact litigation and passionately advocate for expanding immigrant rights and protections across the United States.
What I take on, and what I don't.
Immigration litigation
Federal trial · Appellate · Constitutional · Detention challenges
Impact & policy
Supreme Court · DACA defense · Equal-protection litigation
Teaching & policy
University of Minnesota Law (adjunct) · National Immigration Project (board)
A sample of cases — anonymized.
Past results don't predict future ones. Every case is its own facts. These are here so you have a sense of the work.
Where this attorney has been quoted.
- — PBS VOCES · "From Here / From There" documentary
- — Slate Amicus · Dahlia Lithwick interview
- — University of Idaho Law profile
- — KPBS · Supreme Court journey feature
