Emma Coronel Aispuro, the wife of former Sinaloa cartel kingpin Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera, was released from federal custody on Wednesday, according to authorities.
Coronel, 34, served three years in federal custody for her role in helping her husband run his multibillion-dollar criminal empire. She was accused by federal prosecutors of smuggling drugs into the United States and helping her husband tunnel his way out of a maximum security prison in Mexico in 2015.
Coronel turned herself in to federal authorities in 2021 and pleaded guilty to a money-laundering conspiracy charge and knowingly and willfully conspiring to distribute drugs.
In June, she was transferred from a federal prison in Forth Worth, Texas, to a halfway house in Los Angeles County.
A spokesperson for the Federal Bureau of Prisons confirmed that Coronel was released from custody Wednesday and will remain on supervised release for the next two years, but did not disclose any additional information.
The former teenage beauty queen was born near San Francisco and married Guzmán when she was 18 and he was 50, according to a 2016 L.A. Times interview with Coronel. Because she is a U.S. citizen, Coronel was in Los Angeles County in 2011 when she gave birth to her twin daughters while Guzmán was a fugitive in hiding.
Since the 1990s, Guzmán had been arrested by Mexican authorities on multiple occasions as he rose through the ranks of the Sinaloa cartel. But he also orchestrated numerous prison escapes, including a 2001 trip through a load of prison laundry, which led to a 13-year run from authorities. During that time, Guzmán met Coronel at a beauty pageant in Canelas in the Mexican state of Durango, according to her retelling of the first time they met.
“I would say what won me over was his way of talking, how he treated me, the way we began to get along — first as friends, and from that came everything else,” Coronel said.
Guzmán was captured again in Mexico, but broke out of the maximum-security Altiplano prison near Mexico City through an underground tunnel in July 2015. Federal prosecutors claimed Coronel smuggled a GPS watch to her husband in prison and helped him escape.
When he was finally captured, Guzmán was wanted across multiple jurisdictions in the U.S. and in Mexico.
But it was the Eastern District of New York that filed criminal charges against him that led to his extradition to the U.S. in 2017. He is currently serving a life sentence plus 30 years in ADX Florence, a supermax prison in Colorado.