Going to Denver Immigration Court Without a Lawyer: What 85% of Colorado Immigrants Face
If you're scheduled for a hearing at the Denver Immigration Court, statistics suggest you'll probably face it alone. Colorado ranks dead last in the United States for legal representation in immigration court, with roughly 85% of immigrants appearing without lawyers. The court itself is buried under a backlog of 77,500+ pending cases, up from about 21,000 in 2022.
This guide walks through what happens at a Denver immigration court hearing, what you can do without a lawyer, where to find low-cost representation if you can, and the specific risks of going pro se in immigration proceedings.
Why representation matters in immigration court
Immigration court is the only court system in the United States where the government can detain and deport people but is NOT required to provide them with a lawyer. There is no right to a public defender in immigration proceedings.
Yet the stakes are extraordinarily high — deportation, family separation, loss of work authorization, possible permanent bars to re-entry. And the procedural rules are byzantine. A 2016 study by the Cardozo Law Review found that immigrants with lawyers were 10 times more likely to win their cases than those without.
In Colorado specifically:
- 85% of immigrants appear pro se — the highest rate in the country
- The Denver immigration court backlog has more than tripled since 2022
- Wait times from initial filing to merits hearing can exceed 3 years for non-detained respondents
- Detained respondents move faster but have even less access to counsel
What happens at a Denver immigration court hearing
There are several types of hearings, in roughly this sequence:
1. Master Calendar Hearing (MCH). Short procedural hearing (5-15 minutes typical). The judge reviews charges, you state any defenses or relief you're seeking, and the next steps are set. Multiple respondents are typically scheduled the same day.
2. Individual Calendar Hearing / Merits Hearing. This is the actual trial. Can last hours. You present evidence and testimony for your defenses or asylum/withholding/cancellation claims. Government attorney from ICE Office of the Principal Legal Advisor (OPLA) presents the case against you.
3. Bond Hearing (detained only). Whether you're released from detention pending the case. Conducted before a separate immigration judge.
4. Decision. The judge usually issues an oral decision at the end of the merits hearing OR a written decision within several months.
What you can do without a lawyer
If you can't afford a private immigration attorney (typical cost: $3,000-$15,000+ depending on case complexity), several lower-cost options exist:
1. Pro bono and reduced-fee legal services in Colorado
- Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network (RMIAN) — provides representation to detained immigrants and children in removal proceedings. Limited capacity; not everyone is accepted
- Colorado Legal Services — limited immigration work
- Justice & Mercy Legal Aid Clinic (Denver) — sliding-scale fees
- University of Denver Sturm College of Law Immigration Clinic — student-led representation under faculty supervision
- Catholic Charities of Denver Immigration Services — Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) accredited representatives
2. BIA-accredited non-attorney representatives
Some organizations have accredited representatives authorized by the Department of Justice to represent immigrants without being lawyers. They cost less than attorneys but provide many of the same services. Search the Recognized Organizations and Accredited Representatives Roster.
3. Self-help resources
If you must go pro se:
- The Immigration Court Practice Manual (from EOIR) — explains procedures
- Immi.org — free tool that screens for relief eligibility
- CLINIC (Catholic Legal Immigration Network) — free practice materials in multiple languages
- AILA (American Immigration Lawyers Association) — has a "free legal services directory"
4. Pro Se Counter at the Denver immigration court
The Denver immigration court has a Pro Se Counter where staff can answer procedural questions (not legal advice). They can tell you what forms to file, what the next hearing date is, and how to request continuances. They cannot tell you what relief to seek or how to win.
Common forms of relief
The forms of relief most pro se respondents apply for:
Asylum (Form I-589). For those fearing persecution in their home country based on race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group. One-year filing deadline from arrival in the U.S. (with exceptions). Detailed personal statement, country conditions evidence, and corroborating documents required.
Withholding of Removal. Similar to asylum but with a higher standard of proof and no path to a green card. No one-year filing deadline. Available to those who would be persecuted on protected grounds.
Convention Against Torture (CAT) protection. For those who would be tortured if returned. Highest standard of proof.
Cancellation of Removal. For non-LPRs (under INA § 240A(b)) — requires 10 years continuous physical presence, good moral character, and "exceptional and extremely unusual hardship" to a qualifying U.S. citizen or LPR relative. For LPRs (§ 240A(a)) — 5 years as LPR, 7 years continuous residence, no aggravated felony.
Adjustment of Status. If you have an approved family or employment petition and are admissible, you may be able to apply for a green card during proceedings.
What pro se respondents commonly get wrong
Patterns that lead to lost cases:
- Missing the one-year asylum filing deadline. Many respondents file asylum claims after the deadline and don't know how to argue an exception.
- Insufficient country-conditions evidence. Asylum requires more than your testimony — country reports, news articles, expert affidavits.
- Missing hearings. Failure to appear results in an in absentia removal order. The notice address is critical — keep your address current with the court via Form EOIR-33.
- Not requesting interpreters. You have a right to an interpreter in your language. Ask in advance.
- Conceding deportability. At the master calendar, the government will ask if you concede the charges. Don't concede without understanding what you're conceding — it can foreclose defenses.
Detained vs. non-detained
If you're detained (Aurora ICE Detention Facility or elsewhere), your case moves faster but you have less access to evidence, witnesses, and legal help. Bond is critical:
- Request a bond hearing as soon as possible
- The judge sets bond based on flight risk and danger to community
- Family members can post bond and you can fight the case from outside detention
- If bond is denied, your case proceeds while you're detained
If you're not detained, the case moves slower — sometimes years — but you can prepare evidence, work, and maintain family contact more easily.
What to do today
Whether you have a lawyer or not:
- Confirm your next hearing date. Call 1-800-898-7180 (EOIR automated system) or check EOIR online. Missing a hearing = in absentia removal.
- Keep your address current. File Form EOIR-33 (Change of Address) every time you move. Notices to the wrong address still count as legally served.
- Get a lawyer if at all possible. Free or low-cost options exist (RMIAN, DU Immigration Clinic, Catholic Charities). Even a brief consultation can identify defenses you didn't know about.
- Don't sign anything without understanding it. Voluntary departure forms, stipulations of removal, waiver of rights — all have permanent consequences.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get a free lawyer in immigration court?
There's no right to government-provided counsel. Pro bono representation is available through organizations like RMIAN, but capacity is limited. Most pro se respondents go without counsel.
What if I can't afford a lawyer?
Try the organizations listed above. If they can't take your case, BIA-accredited representatives are a lower-cost middle ground between lawyers and pro se.
Can I switch lawyers mid-case?
Yes. You file a notice of appearance with the new lawyer and the old lawyer withdraws. You may owe the old lawyer for work already done.
What if I miss a hearing?
The judge enters an in absentia removal order. You can file a motion to reopen, but it's hard to win — you need to show "exceptional circumstances" why you missed.
How long does the Denver immigration court backlog mean my case will take?
For non-detained respondents: 2-4 years from filing to merits hearing is typical right now. Detained respondents move much faster (weeks to months).
Can I work while my immigration case is pending?
Possibly — depends on what relief you're seeking. Asylum applicants can apply for work authorization (Form I-765) 150 days after filing the asylum application, and receive EAD if the application is still pending after 180 days. Other forms of relief have different rules.
This is general information, not legal advice. Immigration law is federal, complex, and consequential. The stakes — deportation, family separation, permanent bars — are severe. If at all possible, find an immigration lawyer or BIA-accredited representative before your hearing. Pro se representation in immigration court is high-risk; the statistics speak for themselves.
This is general information, not legal advice. Laws change. Consult a licensed Colorado attorney for guidance on your specific situation.