In the end, Deanna Coleman's crime was too overwhelming to ignore.
The 44-year-old Plymouth woman had hoped her whistleblower status would keep her from having to serve time behind bars for assisting former Wayzata businessman Tom Petters in a $3.65 billion Ponzi scheme over more than a decade.
"Actions speak louder than words," Coleman said softly as she choked back tears. "I've spent the last couple of years trying to make up for what I've done," she said. "I came forward and did everything I could to help ... stop the fraud and help the victims."
But her hopes were dashed Thursday when U.S. District Judge Richard Kyle, while praising her cooperation with government investigators, said Coleman's criminal involvement merited a prison sentence of one year and a day.
"I saw her testify. Everything I saw was truthful, complete and reliable," Kyle told a packed St. Paul courtroom. "But offsetting that is the fact that she was involved for a substantial period. She was not a minor player. She was the No. 1 assistant. I don't think that can be underplayed."
Kyle explained that by sentencing her to a day over one year, it makes her eligible for a 15 percent "good time" reduction in her prison term, meaning she could be released in just over 10 months. She then must serve three years on supervised release. And although her attorney, Allan Caplan, said she is now penniless, a $3 billion-plus restitution order hangs over her head.
Coleman cried when she read a statement apologizing to victims, their families and her family for her actions. She remained stoic as Kyle imposed the sentence.
Caplan said later that she was bracing for a prison sentence.