What he did two days before handing over the position is one of the boldest escapes a Mexican politician has ever made, and what happened after that complicated everything even more. I’ll tell you now, so stay tuned. April 5, 1999 was the day set for the change of command ceremony in Quintana Roo. Mario Villanueva had to formally hand over power to his successor in front of officials, media, and citizens.
That day would change his life forever. Two days before the ceremony, Villanueva simply disappeared. He did not attend the official event, he gave no public explanations, there was no farewell. The governor of one of Mexico’s most popular tourist states vanished as if he had never existed. Federal authorities issued four arrest warrants against him for 13 different crimes and began a spree that would last two full years.
During those 2 years, Mario Villanueva was a fugitive. There were reports that he had left the country, that he was in Central America, that he had protection from powerful people. Authorities never confirmed exactly where he was during all that time. What is known is that on May 24, 2001, the fugitive was arrested in Cancun, the same city where he had begun his political career a decade earlier.
The capture took place on Mexican soil after months of operations. What is not entirely clear is how he survived for so long in hiding, being one of the most wanted men in the country. That part of his story remained in obscurity. After his capture, Mario Villanueva was sent to the Altiplano maximum security prison , popularly known as Almoloya in the State of Mexico.
It was not just any prison. It was the prison designed for inmates considered the most dangerous in the Mexican penitentiary system. The same place where top-level drug lords have been , where isolation is part of the method, and where living conditions are far removed from any comfort. He spent 6 years there.
And what he experienced within those walls was only the beginning of a legal story that would last for decades, crossing borders and completely different legal systems. On the high plateau he experienced something that forever marked his health, and what happened the day he left there is one of the most incredible scenes in this whole case.
In the highlands, the years of confinement began to leave a visible mark on his body. The maximum security regime involves isolation, restricted movement, strict schedules, and conditions that, over time, deteriorate the physical health of any person, especially someone who is no longer young. Villanueva arrived in the highlands after the age of 50.
She left there six years older and with a body that had begun to accumulate damage. In 2007, an unexpected legal turn of events acquitted him of several serious crimes. The court ordered his immediate release, and what happened in the following hours is something that is still hard to believe today if you don’t read it in the official records.
In the early hours of June 21, 2007, Mario Villanueva left the high-security prison in the highlands after a court acquitted him of the most serious charges. For a few minutes he breathed fresh air for the first time in 6 years, but outside the prison, federal agents were waiting for him with another arrest warrant. This faith is linked to the extradition process that the United States had requested.
He was arrested the moment he was leaving. That same night he was transferred to the northern prison in Mexico City. The freedom lasted literally minutes. He went from a maximum security cell directly to another detention center, without having been able to see his family or take a real step into the free world. The legal battle against extradition began from the northern prison .
Villanueva and his lawyers filed appeals arguing that he could not be tried twice for the same crime, that the process violated international treaties, and that there were irregularities in the United States’ request. He even announced at one point a hunger strike as a protest in Quintana Roo, where he still had supporters.
Hundreds of people mobilized towards the nation’s capital to demonstrate in their support, but none of those strategies stopped the process. In 2008 he was sentenced in Mexico to 36 years and 9 months and on May 8, 2010 he was handed over to the United States authorities at the Toluca airport. What happened in the New York court when he arrived in the United States is something that no one who follows this case can ignore. That’s coming up now, don’t go away.
Before the Federal Court of the Southern District of New York, Mario Villanueva Madrid did something that surprised even those who had been following his case for years. He pleaded guilty, without a trial, without a debate of evidence before a jury. He admitted to laundering money for the Juárez cartel.
That type of statement before a United States Federal Court is not made due to emotional pressure or by mistake. It is a strategic legal decision made together with his lawyers and has direct consequences on the sentence imposed. The Court imposed a 131-month prison sentence, taking into account the years he had already spent detained in Mexico.
He was sent to a federal prison in Lexington, Kentucky, to serve that sentence. In Lexington, Villanueva Madrid lived for almost a decade of his American sentence. Federal prisons in the United States have different conditions than the Mexican prison system, more orderly regimes, more structured access to medical care and a different routine, but they also involved total separation from Mexico, from his family, from his everyday language.
He was a man over 60 years old on foreign soil, serving a sentence for crimes he himself had admitted to. His body, which was already deteriorated from years in the highlands and in the northern prison, continued to accumulate damage during those years in Kentucky. When he was repatriated, the American doctors left clear instructions.
When repatriating Villanueva from Madrid to Mexico, the United States authorities expressly recommended that he be guaranteed medical conditions in his country of origin similar to those he had received in the Lexington federal prison. That recommendation was not a courtesy; it was an acknowledgment that the man they were returning was no longer fit for any kind of confinement.
He returned to Mexico as someone who had accumulated two decades of deprivation of liberty in two different prison systems, with a medical history that included documented chronic illnesses and with a sentence in Mexico that he still had to serve. He was sent to the Federal Center for Psychosocial Rehabilitation in Morelos, known as Sefere.
Now comes what nobody tells you in detail. What exactly is Mario Villanueva’s life like today in that house in Chetumal? What does he eat? What are you taking? What time do they check on you? What happens when your body fails? Stay tuned to find out everything. In June 2020, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the authorities granted him the benefit of house arrest, arguing the risk that the virus represented for someone with his health profile.
He was escorted by members of the National Guard from the Cefereepsi prison in Morelos to a house in the Andara subdivision. a residential area in Chatumal, the capital of Quintana Roo. After 21 years and almost 3 months without setting foot on his homeland, as he himself recounted at that moment, with a broken voice, he returned to the city where he was born.

But what happens in that house is nothing like what many people imagine when they hear the word “house arrest.” It’s not freedom, it’s confinement by another name. The house in the Andara subdivision is located on Loveira Street, lot 7, block 58. It is not a mansion nor a hidden luxury.
It is a residential property in a subdivision in Chetumal. And outside that house, at all times, there are members of the National Guard stationed to ensure that he does not leave. The court order authorizing his house arrest establishes very clear conditions. She can’t go out on the street. He cannot freely meet with people outside his family and authorized circle.
He cannot leave the country under any circumstances. The only exception is that he may be transferred to a hospital in case of a medical emergency, and he is accompanied during those transfers. That is the perimeter of his world. Today, what defines their daily lives most is not surveillance or movement restrictions, but their physical condition.
Villanueva Madrid takes 13 medications daily to remain stable. 13. This is not a figure to be overlooked. He stated this himself in April 2026 in a post on his social media accounts where he is still active and where he periodically updates his situation. He said verbatim that although they see him in good spirits, he manages it because his mind is very strong and because those 13 daily medications keep him in a condition to be present, but that the reality is that his life depends on permanent care. It’s not a
dramatized complaint; it’s a concrete summary of their daily lives, and the list of illnesses behind those 13 medications is something you’ll want to hear in full and that will undoubtedly surprise you. The medical records presented to the courts in his various appeals processes document a history of chronic illnesses that was built up over more than two decades of confinement in different prisons.
The most serious disease and the one that appears most frequently in the reports is chronic obstructive pulmonary disease known as COPD. This condition involves permanent lung damage that has no cure, only management. In his case, COPD is accompanied by allergic bronchial asthma and restrictive lung disease, which means his lungs are damaged from several different angles.
And all of that became more complicated when he contracted COVID-19, which left additional aftereffects on a respiratory system that was already compromised. In addition to lung damage, medical records report ischemic heart disease, which is a heart condition where the arteries that feed it do not function properly, increasing the risk of heart attacks.
Added to that are chronic high blood pressure, osteoarthritis that affects his mobility, documented liver problems, and hernias that his own lawyers have described in the most recent legal appeals as a risk factor in any transfer outside of Quintana Roo. The combination of all those conditions in a 77-year-old man is not a medical profile that is easily managed in any environment.
It is a profile that requires specialists, specific medications and rapid access to emergency care. Oxygen dependence is another element that appears in the medical reports. During bronchospasm crises, which experts say occur frequently, his body cannot get enough oxygen on its own and requires assistance.
This means that support teams must be available at his home in Chatumal, and that any situation that takes him away from that medical infrastructure puts him at immediate risk. His defense has used that argument in every appeal they’ve filed from 2022 to 2026. Moving him from Chetumal would expose him to a crisis that might not be able to be addressed in time, and events proved them right in the most compelling way possible in May 2025.
What happened in May 2025 was exactly what his defense had been warning about for years, and it happened at the worst possible time. Stay tuned to find out. In May 2025, Villanueva’s legal situation was at one of its most tense moments. The Attorney General’s Office had obtained a formal order from a specialized court in Mexico City for his transfer back to a prison, the Cefere in Cuautla, Morelos.
Preparations were being made with the National Guard to carry out that transfer. It was the most concrete threat he had faced since arriving in Chetumal in 2020. And then, in the early hours of Wednesday, May 14, 2025, Mario Villanueva was rushed to the Iste hospital in Chetumal. Medical reports confirmed complications in the lungs and heart with cases of probable heart attack.
He was 76 years old at the time. The emergency hospitalization came right in the middle of the legal battle over his transfer. His defense obtained an outright suspension that halted any transfer order while he was incarcerated. But the fight didn’t end there. According to reports, while Villanueva was hospitalized, the prosecution filed an appeal against that suspension.
In other words, while he was in a hospital bed with cardiorespiratory complications, the legal process to get him out of Chetumal continued to move forward. That fact says a lot about the intensity of the dispute behind this case and about the pressures surrounding his daily situation. When he was discharged days after the cardiorespiratory episode, Villanueva did not remain silent.
From his home in Chetumal, he issued a public statement thanking the medical staff who treated him, but at the same time denouncing the conditions of the Iste hospital in Chetumal. He pointed out that the hospital lacks sufficient medicines, functional medical equipment, and decent spaces to care for patients from the south of the state.
That’s the hospital he has access to when his body collapses. He cannot go to a private clinic on his own; he cannot choose where he is treated. When he needs emergency care, he goes to the ISE in Chetumal, which, in his own words, does not have what it should have. And what he reported about the hospital is only part of the real conditions in which he is serving his sentence.
What’s coming next is even stronger . The National Human Rights Commission issued a report at the time about the cherry tree in Chetumal. one of the prisons where Villanueva was detained at some point during his trial, where he pointed out that the prison lacked adequate medical conditions to meet his health needs and that there was also overcrowding and a lack of hygiene in the facility.
That report was presented as an argument in one of his amparo proceedings. What this reveals is not only his particular case, but also that the Quintana Roo prison system, according to the Mexican state’s own human rights organization, does not have the infrastructure to care for an inmate with his conditions, and the federal prison in Morelos, to which the prosecutor’s office wants to send him, is more than 1000 km from Chetumal. Distance matters.
It’s not a minor detail. All the specialists who know his medical history are in Cheetumal, his care network, the doctors who have treated him, the teams he has access to in emergencies. Everything is in Cheetumal. Sending him to a prison in Morelos would mean taking him away from that infrastructure and those specialists and putting him in an environment where, if a cardiorespiratory crisis like the one in May 2025 occurs, the chances of a quick and adequate response are much lower. That argument wasn’t invented by his
defense. This was supported by medical reports presented in court, including one signed by an expert from the prosecution itself. That ruling is one of the most striking elements of this whole case. The legal situation surrounding his daily life is a constant source of pressure that does not stop. The Attorney General’s Office has challenged virtually every ruling that has benefited him since 2020.
When he was granted house arrest, the prosecution argued that it was temporary. When the pandemic ended, he asked to be returned to prison. When a court granted him pensions that prevented his transfer, the prosecution challenged them. When he won a stronger appeal in March 2026 , the prosecution announced in May 2026 that it would challenge that ruling.
There is also a consistency in the institutional stance that has not changed regardless of changes in the leadership of the prosecutor’s office. This man must serve his sentence in prison. Now comes the question that all this raises. What exactly is happening with that protection today in 2026? The answer defines everything that can happen in the coming months.
Stay because you didn’t expect this. On March 30, 2026, the sixth district court based in Chetumal issued an injunction ruling that halted the transfer order to prison. The ruling was not a minor mistake. The judge acknowledged that Villanueva’s health conditions in Madrid are a factor that the judicial system must consider before ordering his confinement in any prison.
He ordered the court that had issued the transfer order to re-examine whether those health conditions make his training viable or not . It was not an acquittal or a release, it was a halt based on medical and legal arguments, but that halt has a potential expiration date. The Attorney General’s Office confirmed in May 2026 that it is challenging that ruling through an injunction.
The appeal was filed with a collegiate court that will have to decide whether the March 2026 resolution was correct, well-founded, or whether it should be revoked. If the collegiate court revokes the injunction, the transfer order to the cefereepsi in Morelos would be reactivated. In that scenario, Mario Villanueva would have to return to a cell at 77 years old, with COPD, ischemic heart disease, hernias, oxygen dependent in crisis, taking 13 medications daily, far from the specialists who know him.
His defense says that’s a disguised death sentence. The prosecution says the law cannot have two versions depending on the age or physical condition of the convicted person. While that appeal is being resolved in the courts, another process is running in parallel that also has Villanueva and his defense busy: the request for conditional release.
His legal team filed that petition arguing that he has already served more than half of his total sentence, that he is 77 years old, that his health conditions are critical and documented, and that Mexican legislation contemplates prison benefits for people in circumstances like his. The prosecution opposed that request, asking that it be dismissed.
However, the court accepted it for analysis. The problem is that there is still no hearing date, and while there is no hearing, there is no resolution. Everything remains in suspense. And amidst all that legal suspense, there is something that Villanueva has been active in, and it is very striking to those who follow his case. I’ll tell you about that now.
Mario Villanueva Madrid maintains an active Facebook account from which he communicates with the outside world. For someone serving a sentence, that’s unusual. He has posted updates about his legal proceedings on that account. He thanked his followers in Quintana Roo for their support. She has denounced what she considers injustices in her case and has made statements about her state of health.
In April 2026, when he won the injunction that halted his transfer, he published a message saying that the federal justice system had given him peace of mind and that he continued to have faith that his situation would soon be resolved. That access to social media is part of the conditions of his house arrest, a condition that no prisoner in a cell has.
In March 2025, before his emergency hospitalization in May, Villanueva gave an interview to Proceso magazine, conducted at the same address where he is serving his sentence. In that conversation, he maintained that his case was political from the beginning, that he was accused for not having lent himself to certain businesses that people close to power wanted to develop in the Riviera Maya.
He has repeated that version for years, and it is the narrative that he and his family have publicly maintained. His son has also said that his father is innocent and that the accusations were false from the beginning. But that version directly contradicts what happened in New York. What he said before the Federal Court of the Southern District of New York was not in an interview or a Facebook post, it was before a federal judge with his own lawyers present within a formal legal process . where the consequences of
lying are extremely serious. And in that scenario, Mario Villanueva Madrid admitted to having laundered money for the Juárez cartel. It was not an ambiguous statement, nor was it pressured by a system he did not know. It was a legally calculated plea of guilt, negotiated with his lawyers, that reduced his US sentence and was part of a plea agreement. That document is public.
That statement is part of the official record of his case in the United States. What just happened in the New York court has an additional detail that connects the whole case in a way that no one has explained well. Don’t leave yet to find out. What Villanueva admitted to the court in New York was not just money laundering in the abstract.
He acknowledged that the money was in gratitude for the support he provided to the Juárez cartel’s drug trafficking cells, which operated in Quintana Roo, and that, given the impossibility of using those amounts in Mexico, he decided to send it abroad for later use. In other words, it wasn’t a mistake, it wasn’t a situation that got out of hand, it was a deliberate, planned decision that included building an international financial scheme to move dirty money so that it couldn’t be easily traced.
That’s not what someone who fell into a difficult situation does; that’s what someone who perfectly understood what they were doing does. US authorities seized $19 million directly linked to him. That figure is the one that was documented, the one that could be traced through the international financial system. The money was distributed in accounts in the Bahamas, Panama, Switzerland, and the United States.
All of that was confiscated as part of the sentence. The man who charged hundreds of thousands of dollars per shipment, who built an international money laundering scheme , who governed Quintana Roo with the economic backing of drug trafficking, today does not have access to those resources.
The sentence included the loss of everything that could be proven, and today when he needs to go to the emergency hospital he goes to the public hospital in Chetumal, which he himself denounced as insufficient. There is something else that defines the history of Villanueva Madrid and that is impossible not to mention. He was the only high-profile defendant in the 1998 maxi-trial who ended up serving an actual sentence of decades.
Of the more than 100 people who were involved in that investigation that revealed the links between the Juárez cartel and the Mexican government, most were acquitted over the years. She either died or was never arrested. Only three remained prosecuted for a significant amount of time, and Villanueva was the only one who ended up spending decades in Mexican prisons.
and a prison in Kentucky. His defenders point to it as proof that it was used as the visible symbol of a process that did not go any higher or further. The files, however, have their guilty plea signed in New York. And now comes the most shocking part of this whole video, something that the prosecution itself, the same one that wants to put him back in a cell, signed and presented to a judge. You can’t miss this.
The most compelling detail of the entire legal process was provided by the Prosecutor’s Office itself, without seeking it out. A medical expert assigned to the Federal Forensic Expert Center of the Attorney General’s Office . In other words, a specialist who works for the institution that has been asking for Villanueva to return to prison for years, presented an official report to the courts describing the former governor’s state of health.
What that official prosecutor’s report said changed the landscape of the case. The expert stated verbatim that Villanueva Madrid suffers from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease complicated by the aftereffects of COVID-19, which makes him dependent on oxygen during bronchospasm crises, and that this occurs frequently.
And then came the most shocking part of the ruling. He stated that his life would be in danger in prison because in that environment a cardiopulmonary crisis could not be adequately treated. The prosecution’s doctor signed a document stating that sending him to jail could kill him. That was what the prosecution presented to the courts.
It wasn’t a defense argument, it wasn’t an opinion from his lawyers, it was the official report of the expert from the institution that wants him imprisoned. And that ruling was one of the pieces of evidence that the judge took into account to grant the injunction in March 2026.
In other words, the prosecution itself, with its own document, contributed to Villanueva being able to stay in his home. It is a paradox that perfectly summarizes the complexity of this case. The State wants him imprisoned, but its own experts confirm that the conditions of the prison system cannot guarantee his survival. While that injunction is being challenged and the courts are deciding.
Villanueva remains in the Andara subdivision with the National Guard outside and his 13, medications inside. His daily routine is not that of someone who enjoys a comfortable benefit, it is that of someone whose body is in a documented process of deterioration , who depends on a public health system that he himself denounced as insufficient and whose real freedom depends on decisions that others make.
He does n’t go for walks in Chetumal, he can’t go to the market or visit whomever he wants. Every move outside that house requires judicial authorization and custody. That’s not freedom, that’s a prison sentence with windows. And what comes next puts everything into perspective. What does this case mean for Mexico, and why is it still not closed in 2026 ? As of May 2026, Mario Villanueva Madrid has accumulated more than 25 years in various forms of deprivation of liberty.
The high plateau, the northern prison, the federal prison in Lexington, Kentucky, the CEFERE in Morelos, and now house arrest in Chetumal. He is one of the Mexican politicians who has spent the most time deprived of his freedom in the country’s modern history, and the sentence he still has to serve, according to calculations based on the current sentence, still exceeds 13 years.
That would mean that without any additional benefits he would be under some form of sentence until past the age of 90. The case of Mario Villanueva Madrid was a watershed moment in Mexico’s judicial history because he was the first Mexican governor formally prosecuted and convicted for links to drug trafficking.
That established, at least on paper, that no political office guaranteed total impunity. However, it also left unanswered questions about how many other people in that same network were never touched, how it was possible for drug trafficking to operate with such freedom in the state for six years of government rule, and what failed in the control mechanisms that should have detected and stopped this situation long before it became the biggest court case of its time.
What makes his current situation different from that of other high-profile prisoners in Mexico is that specific combination of factors that makes his case something that doesn’t easily fit into any simple category. He’s not in a cell, but he’s not free either. He doesn’t have all the resources in the world, but he has access to social networks and active lawyers.
He is not an anonymous prisoner serving his sentence in silence, but neither does he have the power he once had. It is in a limbo that the Mexican legal system does not know exactly how to resolve. between the obligation to enforce the law and the medical reality of a man whom his own system has already documented as being at life risk.
What’s coming in the next few months is a decision by a panel of judges that could change everything. And here’s what we know so far. The Attorney General ‘s Office, now under its new head Ernestina Godoy, confirmed that it is challenging the injunction issued in March 2026. The appeal is in the hands of a collegiate court that must rule on whether the resolution halting his transfer was correct, well- founded, or should be revoked.
There is no public date for that resolution. Meanwhile, the parole process that his defense also has active remains without a confirmed hearing. Two parallel processes, neither resolved, and a 77-year-old man waiting in a house in Cheetumal with his 13 medications. His guards outside and a body that the judicial system itself has already documented cannot be guaranteed in a cell.
The situation has opened a debate that goes far beyond Mario Villanueva Madrid. The question facing the courts is not only what to do with a former governor convicted of links to drug trafficking. The question is, what happens when a person remains legally responsible for a sentence, but physically no longer appears capable of enduring the conditions to serve it? For some, the matter is simple.
They argue that the law should be applied equally to everyone, regardless of age, influence, or illnesses a person may develop over the years. From that perspective, any exception represents a privilege that millions of Mexicans would never receive. Others hold a different view. They believe that the justice system cannot ignore the medical reality of an inmate when there is evidence that certain conditions could put his life at risk .
For them, punishment should not become a sentence that exceeds what is established by the law itself. That discussion comes up constantly whenever Villanueva’s name is mentioned , not only in courts, but also in the media, social networks, and political analysis spaces . His case has become an example of a problem that will likely continue to appear in the coming years. The reason is simple.
Many of the political figures prosecuted during the 1990s are now elderly . The cases remain open, the sentences are still in effect, and the prison systems must face a reality for which they were not always designed. In Mexico there are penitentiary centers prepared to house people considered highly dangerous.
What is not always available is sufficient medical infrastructure to care for inmates suffering from multiple chronic illnesses at the same time. That is one of the points that appears most frequently in the legal resources related to Villanueva. Court documents show that much of the current discussion no longer revolves around crimes committed decades ago.
Those events were investigated, tried, and punished. Today the debate revolves around something much more concrete. Where and under what conditions should he finish serving the remainder of his sentence? Some believe that house arrest represents an excessive advantage. Others point out that it is still a form of deprivation of liberty with permanent surveillance, movement restrictions, and constant judicial supervision.
The difference is that the walls are different. The truth is that, regardless of each person’s opinion about their case, the contrast is difficult to ignore. The man who once controlled one of the most important states in the Mexican Caribbean now depends on judicial authorizations for virtually any movement outside his home.
For years, Villanueva appeared at official meetings surrounded by officials, businessmen, and political representatives. His schedule was full of events, tours, and public appearances. Today, his days are spent between medical appointments, legal procedures, and uncertainty about the decisions that the courts still have to make .
The passage of time has also changed the way many people view this story. For younger generations, Mario Villanueva is not necessarily the governor who led Quintana Roo in 1990. He is a name associated with one of the first major scandals that directly linked drug trafficking to the highest levels of political power.
That transformation is important because it shows how public legacies change. Positions end, administrations conclude, works deteriorate or are replaced, but certain episodes remain associated with a person for decades. In Villanueva’s case , the label that has accompanied him for years is that of being the first former Mexican governor convicted of collaborating with a drug trafficking organization.
It is a historic brand that it will probably never be able to shake off. At the same time, there is also a human dimension that cannot be ignored. Behind the court files, the injunctions, and the rulings, there is an elderly man whose physical condition has become a central element of the case.
That reality constantly coexists with the seriousness of the crimes for which he was convicted. This coexistence between criminal responsibility and physical deterioration is precisely what makes this case so complex. This is not a story where all the answers seem obvious. It is a story full of contradictions, debates, and questions that remain open.
And it is precisely one of those questions that has his family, his lawyers, and federal authorities on edge, because the next court decision could completely change how this story ends. The most striking thing is that after more than two decades of proceedings, there is still no absolute certainty about how this case will conclude. The convictions exist, the files exist, the health problems exist too.
The only thing that doesn’t yet exist is a definitive resolution on where Villanueva will spend the next few years of his life. While the courts deliberate, time continues to move forward. And in a case where age and health have become such important factors, each passing month carries much more weight than it would for any other convicted person.
Therefore, although many consider this story to belong to the past, the reality is that it continues to unfold in real time. The decisions made in the coming months could become the most important chapter since he was granted prison leave. home confinement and it is precisely there where the most surprising detail of this whole process appears.
A detail that did not come from his defense or his supporters, but from the very institution that has been trying to return him to prison for years. What Villanueva Madrid is paying for today with his body and with what remains of his life are the consequences of having put the power of the State at the service of drug trafficking during 6 years of government.
The $00,000 per shipment, the money laundering in the Bahamas and Switzerland, the cocaine shipments that crossed Quintan Rz without anyone stopping them, the guilty plea in New York, all of that is documented, and what came after is also documented . Decades of prisons in two countries, chronic illnesses, a deteriorating body, and a sentence that at 77 years old is still not over.
The consequences of the decisions he made in the 90s are still affecting him in 2026. If you’ve made it this far, it’s because these kinds of stories really interest you, and there’s more on this channel. Subscribe so you don’t miss any new episodes, because we continue to bring you the true stories of well-known people who are serving a sentence, told with verified facts and without embellishment.
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