The Real Issue Usually Isn’t the DUI, Criminal Charge, or Customs Violation

One of the biggest misconceptions about Global Entry appeals is that they are primarily about the incident that triggered the denial. A traveler might think: my case is about a DUI, a dismissed criminal charge, or a customs violation. That is understandable — those are often the events that immediately precede a denial or revocation.

But in our experience, focusing exclusively on the incident often misses the bigger issue. Because Global Entry appeals are not primarily criminal-law casescustoms-law cases, or immigration-law cases. They are fundamentally: Risk-Assessment Cases. And that distinction changes everything.

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The Mistake Many Lawyers Make

Most lawyers naturally begin by asking what happened? That is a reasonable place to start — but it is often the wrong place to stop. Because the government’s question is usually not did this incident occur? The government’s question is often: why does this traveler no longer qualify as a low-risk traveler under 8 CFR § 235.12? Those are very different questions — and they frequently lead to very different strategies. Global Entry Appeal Strategy & Winning.


Global Entry Is a Trust-Based Program

The Global Entry program was created for travelers the government considers low risk. The government is not simply asking whether a traveler committed a mistake — the government is attempting to determine whether that mistake affects the traveler’s status as a trusted traveler.

That is why many Global Entry denials make little sense when viewed solely through the lens of criminal law or customs law. A traveler may have an old arrest, a dismissed charge, or a prior customs issue — and still be approved. Meanwhile, another traveler with no criminal convictions may be denied. The reason is that the government is often evaluating risk, trust, and reliability — not merely counting incidents. What makes a good or bad Global Entry appeal case?


Why Similar Cases Produce Different Results

Most people only see the incident. They do not see the supporting records, the mitigation evidence, the surrounding facts, the government’s risk assessment, or the overall file. Two cases that appear identical on the surface may look very different once all of the information is considered. That is why comparing cases based solely on the underlying incident can be misleading.


Looking Beyond the Incident

Consider two travelers — both with the same DUI from ten years ago.

Traveler A: Little documentation, minimal mitigation, little evidence regarding current trustworthiness.

Traveler B: Strong employment records, character references, evidence of community involvement, evidence of long-term compliance, and military or government service records.

The incident is identical. The overall picture is not. That difference often matters — because the government is not evaluating the DUI in isolation. The government is evaluating the traveler.


The Question We Are Usually Trying to Answer

When evaluating a Global Entry denial, one of the first questions we ask is: why does the government believe this traveler may not qualify as a low-risk traveler? That question drives everything that follows. It influences the records we gather, the mitigation we develop, the evidence we prioritize, and the strategy we recommend. Because once you understand the government’s concern, you can begin developing a response that actually addresses it. And that is where many appeals are won or lost.


What Many Lawyers Focus On vs. What We Focus On

Consider a traveler who was denied because of an old DUI. A criminal-defense lawyer may naturally focus on the criminal charge. A customs lawyer may naturally focus on customs compliance. Those perspectives are not wrong — but they often miss the bigger issue.

Because the government’s concern is frequently not was there a DUI? The government’s concern is often: what does this DUI tell us about risk, judgment, trustworthiness, and eligibility for Trusted Traveler status under 8 CFR § 235.12? That distinction changes the way a case should be evaluated.


The Incident Is Usually Not the Entire Case

The government already knows the incident occurred. The appeal is usually not about informing the government that something happened. The appeal is about helping the government understand the context, the mitigation, the current circumstances, and why the issue should not control the outcome today. That requires a much broader analysis. What makes a good or bad Global Entry appeal case?


What We Focus On

When evaluating a Global Entry denial, we are typically asking: what is the government actually concerned about, what risk is the government evaluating, what information is driving that concern, what records support or undermine that concern, what evidence demonstrates current trustworthiness, what mitigation exists, and what does the overall record show? Those questions often become more important than the incident itself — because they help explain why seemingly similar cases can produce very different outcomes. Global Entry Appeal Strategy & Winning.


The Record Controls the Case

A traveler may say the charge was dismissed — the government wants to see the dismissal order. A traveler may say I completed probation — the government wants to see documentation. A traveler may say I have changed — the government wants to see evidence. That is why records, exhibits, mitigation, and supporting documentation play such a significant role in many successful appeals. The record often controls the case.


Why Security Threat Assessment Experience Matters

Global Entry is ultimately a government vetting program — the government is attempting to determine whether a traveler should be trusted with expedited entry privileges. That process involves evaluating risk, assessing information, and making trust determinations. Many lawyers have extensive experience practicing law. Far fewer have experience evaluating government risk assessments. That experience changes how a case is viewed — because instead of asking how do I explain this incident? the question becomes: how is the government evaluating this information, and what evidence best addresses that concern? That shift in perspective often changes the entire strategy. Why Hire a Global Entry Lawyer?


The Most Common Mistake Travelers Make

The most common mistake we see is trying to prove that the incident was not serious: it was a minor DUI, it was only a dismissed charge, it was just a customs mistake, it happened a long time ago. Those facts may matter — but they often fail to address the government’s actual concern.

A stronger question is: why does this incident not indicate that I am a higher-risk traveler today? That question naturally leads toward mitigationrecords, evidence, rehabilitation, and current circumstances — and those are often the areas that matter most. Top 5 Mistakes People Make on Global Entry Appeals.


Why This Matters When Hiring a Lawyer

If you are evaluating lawyers, one of the most important questions you can ask is: how do you evaluate a Global Entry denial? If the answer focuses entirely on criminal lawcustoms law, or immigration law, you may not be hearing the entire story. The more important question is often: does this lawyer understand how the government is evaluating risk? Because that is frequently what the appeal is really about — and understanding that distinction can change the way the entire case is approached.


A Real-World Example

Traveler A had a DUI ten years ago and submits an appeal explaining it was a mistake, it happened a long time ago, and the traveler regrets it. The appeal contains very little supporting documentation — no mitigation, no reference letters, no evidence of rehabilitation, no employment records, no additional context.

Traveler B has the exact same DUI from ten years ago. However, the appeal package contains:

The appeal also explains why the traveler should still be considered a low-risk traveler today.


Which Traveler Has The Better Case?

Many people answer this question incorrectly — they focus on the DUI. But the DUI is identical. The underlying incident is exactly the same. The difference is the record, the mitigation, the evidence, and how the overall risk picture is presented.


The Government Is Not Evaluating The DUI Alone

The government is evaluating the incident, the passage of time, the supporting records, the mitigation, the overall pattern of conduct, and the traveler’s current trustworthiness. That is why two travelers with seemingly similar histories can receive very different outcomes. The issue is often not the incident itself — the issue is how the government evaluates risk. What makes a good or bad Global Entry appeal case?


Why This Changes The Strategy

Once you understand that Global Entry appeals are risk-assessment cases, the strategy changes. Instead of asking how do I explain what happened? you begin asking: what evidence demonstrates that I should still be considered a low-risk traveler under 8 CFR § 235.12 today? That shift usually leads to a stronger appeal — because the focus moves from the incident itself to the government’s actual concern.


The Appeal Is Rarely About Proving You Were Perfect

The government already knows the incident occurred. The stronger approach is usually: here is what happened, here is the documentation, here is what has happened since, and here is why this issue should not prevent approval or reinstatement today. That is a very different argument — and it is often a much more persuasive one. Top 5 Mistakes People Make on Global Entry Appeals.


Why This Matters

Understanding the government’s perspective affects which records matter, which evidence matters, which mitigation matters, and which arguments matter. Without that understanding, travelers sometimes spend enormous amounts of time addressing issues that are not actually driving the decision. Once the government’s concern is identified, the appeal can be built around addressing the concern that actually matters. And that is often where successful appeals begin. Global Entry Appeal Strategy & Winning.


The Bottom Line: Most Global Entry Appeals Are About Risk, Not the Incident

Many travelers spend months focusing on the event that triggered the denial — the DUI, the arrest, the dismissed charge, the customs violation, the marijuana-related incident, the revocation.

Those facts matter. But they are often not the real issue. The real issue is frequently: why does the government believe this traveler no longer qualifies as a low-risk traveler under 8 CFR § 235.12? That question sits at the center of many Global Entry denials and revocations — and once you understand that, the way you approach the appeal often changes.


The Appeal Is Usually Not About Proving the Incident Never Happened

The government often already knows the dismissed charge, the customs violation was minor, or the DUI happened years ago. The stronger question is: why should this issue not affect eligibility today? That is where recordsmitigation, supporting documentation, and strategy become important.


Understanding Risk Changes Everything

Once you stop viewing the appeal as an incident problem and start viewing it as a risk-assessment problem, the strategy often becomes much clearer. Instead of how do I explain what happened? you begin asking: what evidence demonstrates that I should still be considered a low-risk traveler today? That shift frequently changes the records you gather, the mitigation you develop, the arguments you make, and the overall strength of the appeal.


Why This Matters When Choosing a Lawyer

Many lawyers can discuss criminal charges and customs violations. But Global Entry appeals often require a deeper question: how is the government evaluating risk? Because that is ultimately what drives many of these decisions. Understanding that distinction is one of the reasons some travelers approach their appeal very differently after speaking with us. Why Hire a Global Entry Lawyer?


If There Is One Thing We Hope You Take Away From This Page

Most Global Entry appeals are not really about the incident. They are about the government’s assessment of risk and trust. Understanding that distinction often changes the way the entire case is approached — and in many cases, it changes the quality of the appeal itself.


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


Ready To Discuss Your Case?

If your Global Entry application was denied or your membership was revoked, we can help evaluate the facts, identify the government’s likely concern, and determine whether a realistic path forward exists.

You do not need to know exactly why you were denied. You do not need to have every record. And you do not need to decide whether you want to hire a lawyer before the call.

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