Margaret W. Wong

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Margaret W. Wong
Esq.
MargaretWWong.jpg
Born Margaret Wai Wong
(1950-07-27) July 27, 1950 (age 73)
Hong Kong
Occupation immigration attorney
Known for immigration attorney, entrepreneur

Margaret W. Wong (July 27, 1950 in Hong Kong) is a naturalized American immigration lawyer[1] who created an immigration and nationality law practice in 1978, of which she is senior and managing partner.[2]

Early life and career

She is the eldest child of Hwang Mien Lin, Hong Kong newspaper publisher [3] and Kuan Kuo Hua. She faced the prospect of training to be an artist or a teacher if she continued her education in Hong Kong. Desiring to study medicine, she moved to the United States in 1969 on a student visa, and entered junior college at Ottumwa Heights College, in Ottumwa, Iowa on scholarship. She earned bachelor’s degrees in biology and chemistry at Western Illinois University in Macomb, Illinois in 1973, on full scholarship.

Intending to study medicine, Wong weighed her educational options, and seeing she'd be in school for law only three years, and for medicine many more, she decided to pursue law. She earned her J.D. in 1976 at University at Buffalo Law School, also on full scholarship. Wanting to remain in the U.S. to practice law, she passed the bar in the State of New York, and later in the State of Ohio.

After passing the bar in New York City, she was unable to find legal work. She took a temporary job as a legal and financial officer of the City of Buffalo, New York before moving to Cleveland, Ohio, in 1977, to join Central National Bank as a credit analyst in their management trainee program.[4] While working in Cleveland, she sought entrance to various law firms without success. So after a year with the bank, she opened her own law practice with a single administrative assistant. Recognizing her own need for legal immigration status, she started helping other foreign-born residents maintain their legal status, and work towards naturalization.[5]

When she first started working in Cleveland, Wong noticed a plaza in Shaker Heights, Ohio, and thought it would be a great place to start a restaurant. She opened the Pearl of the Orient in January 1978.[6][7] Wong asked her sister Rose to run Pearl of the Orient, and the restaurant became so successful, Wong opened a second location in 1984 in Rocky River, Ohio. Wong's brother George runs "Pearl West."[5][8][9]

In 1982 she met Kam Hon Chan (April 23, 1949 – January 22, 2014), a pharmacist in Cleveland, and they wed January 3, 1983. They raised two children, Steven and Allison.[10] Wong and Chan founded the Apothe-Care Pharmacy Group, which eventually grew to three Cleveland area pharmacies.[5]

Wong is admitted to practice before the Fourth,[11] Sixth, the District of Columbia Circuit U.S. Courts of Appeals, and the Northern District of Ohio U.S. District Court.

Notable clients

  • Wong was Zeituni Onyango’s attorney in her battle to remain in the United States and win asylum and a Green Card. Because of Wong’s representation for Onyango, half-sister of President Barack Obama’s late father, whose immigration case was leaked to the press just prior to her nephew's 2008 presidential election, the immigration judge wrote in his decision that Onyango faced “great risk…” in her home country from those “…who oppose President Obama's politics and/or his ethnicity, which the Respondent shares…” and so should be granted asylum.[12][13][14]
  • Wong and her law partner, Scott Eric Bratton, argued in defense of Onyango Obama, fighting his deportation, and winning his asylum and a Green Card. Half uncle of President Barack Obama, Mr. Obama’s status became apparent after a 2011 arrest. Wong was quoted before Mr. Obama’s hearing, "He has earned his privilege to stay in the United States. He has been here for 50 years.” [15][16][17]

Notable cases

  • Matter of Adamiak, 23 I&N Dec. 878 (BIA 2006)[18]
  • Mandebvu v. Holder, F.3d, (6th Cir June 18, 2014)(published)[19]
  • Singh v. Gonzales, 451 F.3d 400 (6th Cir. 2006)[20]
  • State v. Yahya, 2011-Ohio 06090 (Ohio App.10th Dist. 2011)[21]

Publications

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Philanthropy

Inspired by the scholarships she enjoyed in college and law school, Wong is devoted to contributing to the success of her community:

  • Having pledged $850,000 to her law school alma mater, in 2012, Wong increased her pledge to $1.5 million, half of which would fund scholarships, and the other half to endow a professorship in immigration law. $1 million would be paid over ten years, and the remaining half-million dollars was a pledged planned giving gift from her estate.[4][22]
  • Wong created a $100,000 scholarship at Cuyahoga Community College in Cleveland, Ohio, in 2011.[23]
  • Wong established the "Margaret W. Wong Endowed Forum on Foreign Born Individuals of Distinction" at the City Club of Cleveland.[24]
  • She has sponsored numerous organizations such as Global Cleveland[25] and the Cleveland Orchestra, and has made many additional pledges of planned giving bequests, including to the Notre Dame College, for which she serves as a trustee, and is a member of their Marian Legacy Society.[26]
  • Wong has pledged significant legacy gifts to the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Foundation,[27] and the Ohio State Bar Foundation.[28]

Awards

References

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