Found guilty on drug and fraud charges
OMAHA - A Lexington man and woman are facing prison sentences after federal charges were handed down Tuesday. Elena Ambriz-Mendoza, also known as Megan Katherine Fulson, 28, was sentenced to one year and one day imprisonment for her conviction on one count of use of forged, counterfeit or otherwise fraudulent documents. Judge Richard G. Kopf also sentenced Adelia-Martinez to a three-year term of supervised release.
According to United States Attorney Joe Stecher and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Ambriz-Mendoza, a citizen and national of Mexico who unlawfully entered the United States, applied for employment with the Holiday Inn Express in Lexington last March.
She submitted a social security card and permanent resident card without authorized identification numbers. The social security number used was assigned by the Commis-sioner of Social Security to a man who had died several years ago. The permanent resident number had been assigned by the Immigra-tion and Customs Enforce-ment to a man who was not the Ambriz-Mendoza. She was arrested on March 13.
Abraham Gomez-Rodriguez, 34, was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment for his conviction of reentry by an aggravated felon into the United States. Judge Kopf also sentenced him to a three-year term of supervised release.
Gomez-Rodriguez was convicted of possession of cocaine and acquiring proceeds from a controlled substances law violation, both felony charges, in Ford County, Kansas, and was sentenced on Aug. 2, 1998. He was then deported from the United States on Oct. 9, 1998, and again on Aug. 27, 2002. Gomez-Rodriguez re-entered the United States in December, 2005, without permission from the United States to do so. He was arrested on July 11, 2007.
http://www.lexch.com/site/news.cfm?news ... 8509&rfi=6

Anyone know what three-year term of supervised release means? Does that mean they get to stay in the US after their prison terms? If so why aren't they being deported?