
Carina V. Guillen is an Immigration Paralegal with over 12 years of experience in family-based immigration, humanitarian relief, and deportation defense. She began her legal career in 2013 as a Legal Assistant, later working as a Paralegal and eventually serving as Operations Director for a couple law firms in Phoenix. Over the years, she has assisted attorneys in preparing asylum, adjustment of status, naturalization, waivers, and removal defense filings, while also guiding clients through interviews, hearings, and the complex documentation required in their cases. Known for her attention to detail and ability to put clients at ease, Carina ensures each matter is handled with care and precision.
Carina’s path to the legal field began with her work as a community organizer in Arizona’s immigrant rights movement following the passage of Proposition 300. Since 2006, she has served in grassroots and national organizations including Somos America, NALEO, SEIU, UFCW and Mi Familia Vota. She played an integral role in coordinating legal observers during Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s crime suppression sweeps, efforts that later contributed to the racial profiling lawsuit against his office. These experiences demanded courage and resilience, giving Carina a first-hand understanding of the challenges immigrant families face—a perspective she carries into her paralegal work every day.
Carina is also a proud first-generation college graduate. She holds an Associate of Applied Science in Culinary Studies from Phoenix College and a Bachelor of Science in Food and Nutrition Entrepreneurship from Arizona State University. A lifelong food lover, she loves cooking with the goal of one day opening her own restaurant, blending creativity with the perseverance that has shaped her journey.
Outside of her professional work, Carina finds joy in traveling, experimenting with new recipes, and creating craft cocktails. Her passions extend beyond the kitchen and into her community, where she dedicates her time to volunteer efforts in civic engagement, citizenship, and asylum—always with the purpose of educating and empowering immigrant families.
In The News

Darius Amiri, immigration department chairman at Rose Law Group, talks to AZFamily about reports of woman with legal status being held by ICE
By Alexis Dominguez | AZ Family Protestors rallied outside the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Field Office in Phoenix on Thursday, focusing on legal residents and citizens getting swept up and detained. The case of a man from Maryland has sparked international controversy after he was deported to a prison in El Salvador, apparently due to a mistake. President Trump campaigned

Rose Law Group Immigration Law Department Chairman Darius Amiri talks to AZFamily about Arizona police cooperating with ICE
By Sarah Robinson | AZ Family They have been alerting ICE agents when police suspect someone they have arrested is in this country illegally. But the issue, according to the report by TRAC immigration, is that immigration agents are not taking those suspects into custody or deporting them. “Detainers” are when a jail detains someone suspected of being here illegally and

Ask Rose Law Group Immigration Department Chairman Darius Amiri: Can CBP really search my phone?
By Darius Amiri, Rose Law Group Chair of Immigration Law Many green card holders and non-immigrant visa holders have been reaching out to us concerned about reports of persons being denied, deported, or turned away from Ports of Entry and airports after US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) went through their phones and mobile devices to review their content. The
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