The fifth of five men charged in a Troy home invasion — believed to be part of an international crime ring and in the U.S. illegally — has opted out of trial with a plea in Oakland County Circuit Court.

On Tuesday of this week, Omar Giovvany Rodriguez-Aponte, 48, pleaded no contest to second-degree home invasion for an Aug. 1 daytime break-in on Millay Drive. Sentencing is scheduled for Nov. 26 by Judge Victoria Valentine.

Rodriguez-Aponte’s plea follows pleas in recent weeks from co-defendants Owen Jean Cortes, 25, Michel Alba Rincon, 39, and Geovanny Castellanos-Forero, 27, all from Colombia, and Mexican Luis Felipe Camargo, aka Alberto Franco Jimenez, aka Franco Venezolana, 43. Cortes pleaded no contest to home invasion and possession of burglary tools. Sentencing had been scheduled for Oct. 22 but was rescheduled to Nov. 12. Rincon and Castellanos-Forero pleaded guilty to second-degree home invasion in August, and have been sentenced to nine months to 15 years in prison. Camargo pleaded no contest to second-degree home invasion, and prosecutors dropped a charge of driving with a suspended license. His sentencing hearing was rescheduled from Oct. 15 to Nov. 12.

According to the Troy Police Department, the Department of Homeland Security has indicated there’s “probable cause to believe (all five) are here (in the United States) illegally.”

Police said the break-in was detected by a homeowner who spotted a masked intruder while watching a security camera set up in his residence. The homeowner was reportedly at work at the time. It was later determined multiple suspects were involved in the home invasion.

Issues with the five men’s immigration status will be handled by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office said.