The Better Question Is: What Are You Actually Buying?
Most people begin with the wrong assumption — they assume they are paying a lawyer to write a letter. If that were true, $2,995 would be difficult to justify. But that is not actually what a professionally prepared Global Entry appeal involves.
The better question is: what work is actually being performed before the appeal is submitted? Because the appeal package is usually the end product of a much larger process involving investigation, record gathering, mitigation development, risk analysis, and strategic decision-making.
Book a free consultation | Take the free appeal assessment
What We Are Actually Building
A professionally prepared Global Entry appeal often involves:
- Identifying the government’s concern
- Gathering and reviewing records
- Evaluating government risk concerns
- Developing mitigation evidence
- Obtaining supporting documentation
- Organizing exhibits
- Preparing the appeal package
- Guiding the client through the process
The appeal letter is the final product — but it is built upon everything that comes before it.
The Appeal Letter Is Often the Centerpiece of the Package
The writing matters — a great deal. In many cases, the attorney-written appeal itself may be seven to ten pages long and supported by twenty to fifty pages of exhibits, records, reference letters, and mitigation evidence. The appeal letter is where the strategy comes together — it explains the issue, the relevant facts, the supporting evidence, the mitigation, and why approval or reinstatement is appropriate. A strong appeal letter is built around the specific facts of the case and the government’s likely concern. Sample Global Entry Appeal Package.
What Does a Typical Appeal Package Look Like?
A professionally prepared appeal package may include:
→ Attorney-Written Appeal Letter (7-10 Pages)
→ Court Records
→ Customs Records
→ Reference Letters
→ Employment Documentation
→ Educational Records
→ Military Records
→ Mitigation Evidence
→ Organized Supporting Exhibits
The goal is building a complete, evidence-based explanation of why the traveler should still be considered a low-risk traveler under 8 CFR § 235.12.
The Most Valuable Part of the Appeal Often Happens Before the Writing Begins
A traveler may believe I was denied because of an old arrest — but the actual issue may be a customs violation, an application disclosure concern, a government record error, an association concern, or something entirely different. If the wrong issue is being addressed, even an exceptionally well-written appeal may struggle. The writing is important — but the writing has to be directed at the right problem.
Global Entry Appeals Are Fundamentally Risk-Assessment Cases
Most people naturally focus on what happened? The government is often focused on: why does this traveler no longer qualify as a low-risk traveler? That distinction matters. The strongest appeals are rarely built around arguing that nothing happened — instead, they are built around explaining why the issue should not prevent approval or reinstatement today. Understanding that difference influences the records we gather, the mitigation we develop, and the evidence we prioritize. What Most Lawyers Miss About Global Entry Appeals.
Record Gathering Takes Time
Many travelers contact us before they have gathered any records — and that is completely normal. Examples may include court records, dispositions, expungement orders, customs records, employment records, character references, and military records. Part of our process involves identifying which records matter and helping determine how to obtain them — because a strong appeal is usually built on evidence, not assumptions.
Mitigation Is Often More Important Than People Realize
Examples of mitigation may include employment history, professional achievements, educational accomplishments, military service, security clearance history, community involvement, rehabilitation evidence, and character references. These materials help answer: why should this traveler still be considered low risk today? In many appeals, that question matters far more than the underlying incident itself. Global Entry Appeal Success Factors.
Why Some Lawyers Charge Less
The more important question is: what is included? Does the lawyer help obtain records, develop mitigation evidence, evaluate FOIA options, build a complete appeal package, guide you through the process, and screen cases carefully before accepting them? The fee itself tells only part of the story. The services included tell the rest.
The Refund Promise Changes the Equation
If National Security Law Firm accepts your matter for full Global Entry or Trusted Traveler Program appeal representation and the appeal is not successful, we refund your legal fee under the written terms of the engagement agreement. The question is no longer simply is the fee worth it? — the question also becomes: is the firm willing to stand behind its evaluation of the case? We are.
Related Resource: Approved or Reinstated — or Your Legal Fee Back
Why We Do Not Accept Every Case
The refund promise only works because we are willing to decline some matters. That screening process protects both the client and the firm and allows us to stand behind the cases we choose to accept.
Related Resource: When We May Decline a Global Entry Case
The Bottom Line
The fee is for: ✔ identifying the government’s concern, ✔ gathering records, ✔ evaluating risk, ✔ developing mitigation, ✔ building the evidentiary record, ✔ preparing the appeal package, ✔ drafting the appeal, and ✔ guiding the client through the process. The appeal letter is often the final expression of all that work — built upon everything that comes before it.
Thinking About Hiring a Lawyer?
What am I actually paying for?
→ What We Do in a Global Entry Appeal
What does the work product actually look like?
→ Sample Global Entry Appeal Package
Why should I trust you?
→ Approved or Reinstated — or Your Legal Fee Back
Do you take every case?
→ When We May Decline a Global Entry Case
What happens if I schedule a consultation?
→ What Happens During Your Free Global Entry Consultation
Book a Free Consultation | Take the Free Appeal Assessment
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