Wrong, my son and his wife have never had this problem. I suppose there are ways to keep from violating law(s) where one doesn't get the 'visit'. LOL
Actually, what your sone and daughter-in-law did was no different that what happened in this story. The difference is that their paperwork was properly filed and their cases adjudicated without any problems. In this case, the woman thought the case was properly filed, just like your family did, but in reality, it was seriously screewed up. Because she did enter the country legally, she had due process to appeal her order, turned herself if, most likely after realizing her notary is a crook and getting good legal advice. According to later posts, the judge ruled in her favor. Do you disagree with this judge? Even ICE agrees not to persue this matter any further. I don't consider this a willful violation of U.S. immigration laws or an attempt to defraud immigration. The outcome is as it should be.