From the Washington  Post.com:
Connie Alexander was a compulsive gambler  who must have thought she hit the jackpot when she met Harriette Walters,  who showered her with lavish gifts and even helped pay for Alexander's  2006 wedding at a Las Vegas hotel.
Yesterday, the marker came due in what  turned out to be a high-stakes crime.
Alexander, one of 10 people prosecuted  for helping Walters embezzle millions of dollars from the D.C. tax office,  was sentenced yesterday to almost four years in prison for her role  in the massive fraud, which cost the District government almost $50  million.
Appearing before U.S. District Judge  Alexander Williams Jr. in Greenbelt, Alexander, 53, of Bowie, apologized  to her family, to the court, to the government and to the "people  of D.C."
"I know sorry doesn't make it all  go away, but I am truly sorry," she told Williams.
 
All 11 defendants in the case have pleaded  guilty, and all have been sentenced except Walters, who is scheduled  to learn her punishment next month in federal court in the District.
 
Alexander was the first defendant in  the case to come forward to cooperate with government investigators,  and her attorney, Aitan D. Goelman, asked the judge to impose only probation.
 
Williams, who has sentenced seven other  defendants in the D.C. case, rejected that request, saying Alexander's  actions, which netted her more than $3 million, called for "punishment."
 
"This is not a probation case, under  no stretch of the imagination," Williams said. "No one has  gotten probation, and no one should have gotten probation."
 
But the judge appeared to be moved by  the defense presentation, which included the testimony of a gambling  addiction expert from New York, letters from Alexander's friends, colleagues  and relatives, and a tearful statement from Alexander.
 
"I'm not going to throw the book  at her," the judge said, noting that Alexander appeared to be truly  remorseful.
Alexander was working in a casino in  1992 when she met Walters, who was a regular patron of the gambling  hall. The two became friends, and Walters would give her gifts of money  that averaged $5,000. It was not until some time between 1998 and 2000  that Walters enlisted Alexander in the scheme, which involved issuing  fraudulent property tax refund checks and by then was several years  old.
At the direction of Walters, Alexander  endorsed and deposited eight such checks totaling more than $1.5 million.  Between 2000 and 2007, Alexander received 92 payments totaling almost  $3.2 million.
Alexander had pleaded guilty to receiving  stolen property and conspiracy to commit money laundering, and with  credit for her cooperation, the sentencing guidelines called for a sentence  of 46 to 57 months.
Goelman had argued that the extent of  Alexander's cooperation merited more credit than other defendants in  the case had received. But Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan C. Su, while  acknowledging that the assistance was truthful and complete, declined  to ask for additional credit, and Williams said he did not see cause  to give Alexander a further break.
