about

"Fighting for justice for immigrants. Fighting for you."

Advocating for immigrants and their families

Attorney Cain Oulahan has been fighting for immigrant rights for over 15 years. His practice focuses on family-based immigration, deportation defense, naturalization, U visas, VAWA, asylum, deferred action/DACA, post-conviction relief, and the immigration consequences of criminal convictions. He is currently a consulting attorney with Mexican Consulate in Milwaukee. He volunteers regularly with the Marquette Volunteer Legal Clinic and frequently presents on immigration issues for local non-profit organizations, churches and schools.

Attorney Oulahan is fluent in Spanish. He has a Bachelor’s Degree in Latin American Studies from Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota. He graduated cum laude from Marquette University Law School where he was an associate editor of the Marquette Law Review. His comment, titled “The American Dream Deferred: Family Separation and Immigrant Visa Adjudications at U.S. Consulates Abroad,” was published in the Summer 2011 edition of the Marquette Law Review.

Attorney Oulahan was Chair of the Wisconsin Chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA), the past President of the Wisconsin Hispanic Lawyers Association, and member of the League of United Latin American Citizens. He has appeared on the PBS program Adelante, the Telemundo evening news and program Buscando Soluciones, and has been interviewed by Wisconsin Public Radio.

Get in touch with us to set up a consultation.

 

Contact

➤ LOCATIon

2514 S. 102nd St., Ste 190

West Allis WI 53227

☎ CONTACT

Tel: (414) 501-3963

cain@oulahanlaw.com

➤ Mailing address

1314 S. 1st Street #365
Milwaukee, WI 53204

 

Areas of Practice


Family based immigration

 


U visas and vawa

 


deportation defense and Asylum

 


deferred action

 


Naturalization and citizenship

 


post-conviction and immigration consequences of crimes

 

 

 
 
Many of us are engaged in this campaign because we care about the rights of immigrants and won’t stand to see them trampled; because the Constitution applies to everyone residing in this country and we can’t allow that to change; because the immigrants of today are no less deserving than my own relatives who came from Ireland, Poland and Luxembourg several generations ago.
— Cain Oulahan