My question involves a condominium located in the State of: Michigan

I have a condo, as stated above in Michigan, where board members entered my condo without permission while I was not there. They claim they did it to inspect to make sure heating was on because of the cold. They had no stated facts that lead them to believe it was not, no leaks, no frozen pipes, etc (and heat was indeed on).

Our bylaws include clauses for them to enter with notice (unsure if they tried to give notice or not, but they sure never connected with any notice, because I was unaware) as necessary ONLY for maintenance, repair, or replacement of elements of communal areas. It also gives them the ability to enter in an emergency if they believe it's necessary for the safety of the inhabitants or to prevent damage to a neighboring unit or communal area.

As there was no maintenance, repair, or replacement of elements in a communal area going on, and there was no reason to believe any form of emergency was happening, I just can't see how they are justified under our bylaws, and as far as I can tell under MI law the interior of my condo is exclusive property that they may not otherwise enter. Am I correct that they committed a crime by entering this condo without permission?