http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?n...d=425695&rfi=6

Two illegal immigrants from Princeton arrested in July as part of an alleged conspiracy to gain drivers' licenses in Tennessee were released from jail on Oct. 28.
Antonino Sanchez-Gonzalez and Raymundo Balbuena-Ramos were arrested in Knoxville, Tenn., with Zeneida Concepion Rivera of Lakewood on July 13 by the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force. Ms. Rivera was charged with conspiracy to cause the unauthorized production of identification documents. Published reports said she was the alleged organizer of a conspiracy in which illegal immigrants paid her $950 to travel to Tennessee and obtain drivers' licenses.
On Oct. 28, the two Princeton residents held in the case were released from jail, where they had been detained since July. In mid-October, they had appeared at a hearing before the U.S. District Court of the Eastern District of Tennessee, during which they pleaded guilty to a minimal charge in return for testifying against Ms. Rivera. Their sentences were reduced to time served, and they were surrendered to the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, according to a representative of the clerk of the court in the Eastern District of Tennessee.
Patricia Fernandez-Kelly, a trustee of the Latin American Legal Defense and Education Fund, worked with Mr. Sanchez-Gonzalez and his family throughout his detainment. After Mr. Sanchez-Gonzalez and Mr. Balbuena-Ramos were surrendered to ICE, Ms. Fernandez-Kelly said, they appeared in immigration court. There, the judge allowed them to post $1,500 bond and gave them 30 days to voluntarily depart the country.
Ms. Rivera pleaded guilty to the conspiracy charge Oct. 11 and was allowed to remain free on bail pending her Dec. 15 sentencing hearing, according to published reports.
Friends drove to Tennessee to pick up the two Princeton residents, and they returned home Saturday.
Maria Juega, chairwoman of LALDEF, said the 30-day time period will give the two a chance to see their families before leaving the country.
"They'll be able to arrange their affairs," she said.
Ms. Juega said she and the families were surprised at the release. Ms. Fernandez-Kelly called it a "miracle."
She said the time in jail was a "terrible shock" for the two men and criticized what she said was the increased criminalization of immigration offenses.
"Crossing the border illegally has always represented a civil offense," Ms. Fernandez-Kelly explained.
Jeremy Jennings, an immigration attorney in Knoxville who worked on the case, said he was surprised the men were detained in jail throughout the process, even after their custody was transferred to ICE.
"They're not criminals, they have relatively long histories, they have family histories here and they had cooperated with the government," Mr. Jennings said. "The truth of that came out at the immigration hearing."
Mr. Jennings explained that the $1,500 bond secures the voluntary departure agreement. The bond money is released back to the immigrants when they go to the U.S. consulate in their home country.
Mr. Sanchez-Gonzalez and Mr. Balbuena-Ramos are required to leave the United States, using their own transportation, by Nov. 25, Ms. Fernandez-Kelly said.

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Now everybody who believes these two will self-deport stand on their heads.