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Enrique Gonzalez
Fragomen Worldwide
Enrique Gonzalez has been involved
with the EB-5 program for the entirety
of his career—and nearly for the
entirety of the program itself. His first
serious encounter with EB-5 was in
1994, when he counseled Canadian
clients on direct investment cases. Along
with the rest of the industry, Gonzalez’s
EB-5 practice experienced explosive
Jennifer Hermansky
Greenberg Traurig LLP
Jennifer Hermansky first began working
on EB-5 investor cases in 2009, and
subsequently added regional center
matters to her repertoire. She has since
been involved in more than 50 regional
center projects and has handled hundreds of investor petitions. Hermansky
works at the Philadelphia office of
Greenberg Traurig, LLP and is part of
IMMIGR ATION AT TORNE YS
growth around 10 years ago. Today he is
the managing partner of Fragomen, Del
Rey, Bernsen & Loewy, LLP’s Florida
office, where he leads a dedicated EB-5
team.
Gonzalez has spent 19 years of his
career practicing immigration law at
Fragomen, with the exception of nine
months in 2013 where he worked in
the U.S. Senate. He works with six
other immigration professionals to
counsel both individual investors and
regional centers. He estimates that Latin
American investors currently make up
about 90 percent of his casework.
In the Florida office, Gonzalez’s
team is committed to never accepting
finders’ fees and will never represent
investors in the same projects that they
are also representing. This commitment,
coupled with technical knowledge
and experience, has contributed to the
team’s 100 percent success rate to date.
This reputation has allowed Gonzalez
to grow his business primarily through
referrals and to build niches in certain
international markets.
Gonzalez’s perspective not only
encompasses the lifespan of the
EB-5 program, but is also heavily
influenced by his work on immigration
legislation. In 2013, he served as Sen.
Marco Rubio’s (R-FL) senior advisor
on immigration matters. He was the
principal negotiator for the Republican
Gang of Eight as S.744 advanced
through the Senate. He wishes that
every immigration attorney could have
the chance to experience that side of the
legal system.
Gonzalez believes in the EB-5
program’s power to drive the economic
engine of our country and keep the
United States competitive. He is a
frequent speaker on immigration
issues, and EB-5 specifically, and his
immigration reform work has been
cited in publications such as The New
Yorker, The New York Times and The
Washington Post.
the firm’s EB-5 team. She has devoted
her entire practice to EB-5 because she
is truly passionate about it, allowing her
to build a thorough understanding of
the process.
With a degree in finance and a
background handling entrepreneurial
cases for clients seeking E-2 or L-1
visas, Hermansky is intimately familiar
with the business immigration process
and applies this knowledge to all of her
EB-5 cases. She is knowledgeable about
the EB-5 program from start to finish,
helping investors from the moment they
decide to file until they become U.S.
citizens, and counseling regional centers
on issues of management, staffing and
job creation.
Because she has worked with so
many individual EB-5 petitioners and
knows exactly what they are looking for
in a project, Hermansky has a unique
perspective in the area of regional
center development. She assists with
business plans, economic reports and
securities offerings, ensuring that each
is EB-5-compliant and marketable to
foreign investors. Hermansky finds it
very satisfying to work on a successful
project with tangible and profitable
results, while also seeing immigrants
receive green cards.
Hermansky has learned that the most
difficult aspect of EB-5 is keeping up
with changing adjudication patterns,
and excessive processing times. Despite
these recurrent issues, Hermansky has
seen the EB-5 program bloom, with the
players currently involved in EB-5 projects elevating the industry to a higher
standard. Hermansky believes that both
the immigration and securities aspects
of EB-5 will become more regulated,
and this will only make projects better
and improve investment opportunities
for immigrants. When she is not
working on EB-5 cases, you might find
Hermansky golfing or fishing.
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