El Chapo's wife sentenced 3 years for helping him run multi-billion dollar drug empire
Emma Coronel Aispuro also helped plan husband's dramatic 2015 escape from prison
The wife of Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman was sentenced Tuesday to three years in prison after pleading guilty to helping her husband run his multi-billion dollar criminal empire.
Emma Coronel Aispuro also helped her husband plan a dramatic escape through a tunnel dug underneath a prison in Mexico in 2015 by smuggling a GPS watch to him disguised as a food item, prosecutors said during a hearing in federal court in Washington. That helped those digging the tunnel pinpoint his location and reach him.
The leader of the Sinaloa cartel was recaptured the following year.
Prosecutors had asked for four years in prison, but U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras imposed a shorter term, saying her role was a small piece of a much larger organization. Her arrest doesn't seem to have reduced the harm caused by the cartel, he said.
"There appears to be no shortage of willing participants," he said.
'Safety valve' provision
Aispuro had faced a minimum of 10 years in prison, but was subject to a so-called "safety valve" provision because she had no criminal record, was not considered a leader and was not involved with violence.
Defence attorneys also pointed out she was a 17-year-old from an impoverished family when she met Guzman and married him on her 18th birthday.
"This began when she was a very impressionable minor married to a powerful man more than three decades older," Jeffrey Lichtman said.
Coronel Aispuro expressed "true regret for any and all harm" as she spoke through a Spanish translator in court. "I am here before you, asking for forgiveness," she said. She asked for a sentence that would allow her to watch her nine-year-old twin daughters grow up.
She previously pleaded guilty to three federal offences as part of a plea deal with federal prosecutors. She also surrendered $1.5 million US.
The charges include knowingly and willfully conspiring to distribute heroin, cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamine for several years. She also pleaded guilty to a money-laundering conspiracy charge and to engaging in transactions with a foreign narcotics trafficker.
She also helped buy land for the tunnel and smuggle Guzman's messages to his subordinates while he was in prison, which allowed him to stay in control of the Sinaloa cartel while behind bars.
"He chose her to move those messages to people who worked for him," said prosecutor Anthony Nardozzi, who called her a "cog in a very large wheel."
The 32-year-old was arrested in February at Dulles International Airport in Virginia and has been jailed since then. She will also serve four years of supervised release after the prison sentence.