A 90-year-old Indiana man who admitted serving as a cocaine courier for a Mexican drug cartel was sentenced on Wednesday to three years in federal prison.
Leo Sharp, a decorated World War II combat veteran who turned 90 on Wednesday, was also sentenced to three years supervised release by Judge Nancy Edmunds in the US District Court in Detroit.
Sharp had told Edmunds before she sentenced him: “All I can tell you, your honor, is that I’m really heartbroken that I did what I did. But it’s done.”
Afterward, Sharp turned to prosecutors and called the three-year prison term a “death sentence.”
Sharp was pulled over by police in October 2011 for erratic driving on an interstate highway in Michigan with what turned out to be 104 bricks of cocaine in his truck.
Prosecutors said Sharp hauled 1,250kg of cocaine into Michigan from the southwest US on a half-dozen trips from February 2010 until his arrest, earning US$1,000 per kilogram for drugs he transported.
He also hauled duffel bags stuffed with cash back to the southwest border of the US for the criminal organization that was part of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, prosecutors said.
He pleaded guilty in October last year to one count of conspiring to distribute cocaine, in an agreement with prosecutors that included a recommendation for a prison sentence of five years.
Sharp’s attorneys had asked for supervised release or home confinement, saying he suffers from dementia and other health conditions, and needs 24-hour monitoring.
However, prosecutors said that Sharp had managed to avoid detection for a decade, in part because of his age, and was now trying to use his age to shield himself from punishment.
Edmunds departed from both suggestions and said the effort to blame Sharp’s actions on age and dementia was “an insult to all the people who struggle with dementia and don’t become involved in illegal activity.”
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