Russian 'Traitor' Mom Returns Home to 7 Children

Artur, son of Russian activist Svetlana Davydova and her husband Anatoly Gorlov, holds up a photo of his mother to the camera, at their home in Vyazma, Jan. 30, 2015.
Mother of seven, Svetlana Davydova was detained after being accused of contacting the Ukrainian Embassy in Moscow to tell them that a military base near her home had been virtually emptied after the troops were sent somewhere.
A petition for her release from pre-trial detention gathered more than 30,000 signatures and the Smolensk mother was freed on Tuesday from Moscow's Lefortovo detention facility.
Davydova faces 20 years behind bars if found guilty.
Read more:
30,000 People Ask Putin to Let Mother-of-7 Await Ukraine Treason Trial at Home
Russian Mom Facing Treason Charges Granted Conditional Release
Mother of seven, Svetlana Davydova was detained after being accused of contacting the Ukrainian Embassy in Moscow to tell them that a military base near her home had been virtually emptied after the troops were sent somewhere.
A petition for her release from pre-trial detention gathered more than 30,000 signatures and the Smolensk mother was freed on Tuesday from Moscow's Lefortovo detention facility.
Davydova faces 20 years behind bars if found guilty.
Read more:
30,000 People Ask Putin to Let Mother-of-7 Await Ukraine Treason Trial at Home
Russian Mom Facing Treason Charges Granted Conditional Release
Maxim Zmeyev / Reuters

Anatoly Gorlov, husband of Russian activist Svetlana Davydova, spends time with their children at their home.
Maxim Zmeyev / Reuters

Anatoly Gorlov, husband of Russian activist Svetlana Davydova, spends time with their children Artur, Spartak and Eduard (L-R) at their home.
Maxim Zmeyev / Reuters

Artur, son of Russian activist Svetlana Davydova and her husband Anatoly Gorlov, looks at photos of his mother at their home.
Maxim Zmeyev / Reuters

Yabloko (Apple) political party leader Sergei Mitrokhin (L) attends a rally in support of Svetlana Davydova, who was detained on suspicion of treason, as a policeman checks the documents of participants near the Federal Security Service headquarters in central Moscow, Feb. 3, 2015.
Sergei Karpukhin / Reuters

A man holds a placard during a rally in support of Svetlana Davydova near the Federal Security Service headquarters in central Moscow.
Sergei Karpukhin / Reuters

Russian activist Svetlana Davydova feeds her daughter Kassandra after returning home in Vyazma, Feb. 4, 2015.
Maxim Zmeyev / Reuters

Russian activist Svetlana Davydova spends time with her sons Spartak and Eduard (R) in the kitchen after returning home.
Maxim Zmeyev / Reuters

Russian activist Svetlana Davydova spends time with her children (L-R) Spartak, Kassandra and Eduard in the kitchen after she returned home.
Maxim Zmeyev / Reuters

Russian activist Svetlana Davydova (2nd R), her husband Anatoly Gorlov (L) and children Spartak (2nd R), Kassandra (3rd L), Eduard (R) and Artur pose for a picture in Vyazma.
Maxim Zmeyev / Reuters