Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez's brother was sentenced to life in prison by a New York judge Tuesday for large-scale drug trafficking after a trial that implicated the leader of the Central American country.
Tony Hernandez, 42, was found guilty in October 2019 on four counts, including conspiring to import cocaine into the United States, possessing machine guns and making false statements.
Judge P. Kevin Castel said a life sentence for the former Honduran congressman who trafficked more than 185 tons of cocaine into the United States, some branded with his initials "TH," was "richly deserved."
Prosecutors had demanded life, stressing that Hernandez had "shown no remorse" and was "a central figure in one of the largest and most violent cocaine trafficking conspiracies in the world."
His defense team had called for the mandatory minimum sentence of 40 years.
Hernandez, who served as a member of the Honduran Congress from 2014 to 2018, was arrested at a Miami airport in November 2018.
During the trial, U.S. prosecutors said President Hernandez had been a "co-conspirator" in his brother's crimes, although he has not been formally charged by the U.S. judicial system.
Government attorneys said the president took millions of dollars in bribes from drug lords, including jailed Mexican kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman.
President Hernandez has repeatedly denied all allegations of drug trafficking.
In a tweet ahead of the sentencing, the president said the news from New York would "be painful" and repeated an allegation that the main witness in the trial had lied.
Hernandez, a lawyer who came to power in January 2014 and is in his second term, has styled himself as a champion in the fight against drugs.
During his brother's trial, the U.S. government successfully argued that Tony Hernandez was a large-scale drug trafficker who worked from 2004 to 2016 with others in Colombia, Honduras and Mexico to import cocaine into the U.S. by plane, boat and submarine.
Hernandez made millions of dollars from the trafficking and used the proceeds to influence three presidential elections, according to U.S. attorneys.
The prosecution also said Hernandez was involved in at least two murders of rival drug traffickers in 2011 and 2013.
Defense lawyers unsuccessfully questioned the credibility of witnesses, many of them former drug traffickers, some of whom had been convicted of murder.
U.S. prosecutors have aggressively pursued current or former Honduran public officials and their relatives over drug trafficking allegations.
Earlier this month, a New York jury found Geovanny Fuentes Ramirez, an alleged associate of President Hernandez, guilty of drug trafficking.
During his trial, U.S. prosecutors said the Honduran leader had helped Fuentes smuggle tons of cocaine into the United States, an allegation the president described as "obvious lies."
Guzman, the former co-leader of Mexico's feared Sinaloa drug cartel, was convicted in New York in February 2019 of smuggling hundreds of tons of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamines and marijuana into the United States.