Cassandra Sainsbury was accompanied by her family as the judge yesterday accepted the plea deal, a huge reduction from the 30 years in jail she faced had the case gone to trial. Her lawyer Orlando Herran said that with good conduct, his client could be released from prison in as little as two years and placed under house arrest even before then. She must also pay a fine of nearly USD 100,000.
However, she changed her story several times, later claiming she had been set up and threatened by people back in Sydney, where she said she worked as a receptionist at a brothel.
Prosecutors, in seeking leniency, were persuaded that her crimes weren't so black and white, said Herran.
"She's lucky because the amount of the drugs was very big," he told a bevy of Australian journalists who traveled to Colombia after the closed-door hearing.
Colombia is the world's largest producer of cocaine and its police among the best trained to detect and stop drug smuggling thanks in part to billions of dollars in US anti- narcotics aid that has strengthened law enforcement.
Many families have sad tales of loved ones who've spent years behind bars in the US and elsewhere after being drawn by economic hardship into the lower rungs of the drug trade.
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