Mario Ernesto Villanueva Madrid, 64, was sentenced in US District Court in Manhattan to 10 years and 11 months in prison after he pleaded guilty last year to conspiracy to commit money laundering. He was originally accused of conspiring to import hundreds of tons of cocaine.
Villanueva Madrid, a former governor of the Mexican state of Quintana Roo, has been jailed since 2001, when he was first charged with similar crimes in Mexico.
Carlos Villanueva, Villanueva Madrid's son, said outside court that his father faces a 23-year sentence in Mexico once he is freed from US prison, but was likely to be credited for some of the time he has already been in custody. He said the case in Mexico was under appeal.
US Attorney Preet Bharara said in a news release after the sentencing that Villanueva Madrid was "entrusted to serve the public in Mexico, but instead, in return for millions of dollars in bribes, he provided safe passage to a brutal drug cartel allowing it to move massive amounts of cocaine through the state he governed."
Prosecutors said Villanueva Madrid, who had previously served as mayor of Cancun, was elected governor of Quintana Roo in April 1993. They said he entered into an agreement with the Juarez Cartel to ensure cocaine shipments were not interrupted by law enforcement authorities.
