What Most Defendants Get Wrong About Cooperation

This blog closes out our 10-part series based on the New York Times article about Hugo Mejia. You can read the full article [here]. While Hugo’s outcome had nothing to do with cooperation, his case still teaches a lesson most cooperating defendants ignore: prosecutors may recommend leniency, but without proof you’ve changed, it carries little weight.

A lot of people think cooperation means freedom. No prison. No time.

They believe that helping the government—handing over documents, giving testimony, identifying others—is a get-out-of-jail card.

It isn’t.

I’ve worked with dozens of people who cooperated. Some got time off. Some still did years. A few, even with strong 5K1 motions, received prison time because the judge didn’t believe they had learned anything.

One man I spoke with last year had spent over a year working with investigators. He turned over information, wore a wire, and even showed up to testify. When it was over, he assumed he’d get probation.

He didn’t.

The judge gave him 27 months. Why? Because the cooperation only addressed the crime. It didn’t show any personal growth. There was no letter of apology. No reflection. No record of effort. Just a lawyer saying, “He helped us.”

Judges weigh cooperation. But they also weigh everything else.

What did you do after pleading guilty? What do your support letters say? What did you tell probation? Did your actions match your words?

If all you have is cooperation, that’s all the judge will consider. And if it looks like you only cooperated to save yourself, it won’t carry nearly as much weight as you think. It might even backfire..

Let me be blunt: the government’s recommendation is not the final word. The judge has discretion. And if they believe you’re using cooperation to avoid responsibility, they’ll say so—right there in open court.

That’s why I tell cooperating defendants to prepare like they’re not getting the 5K1. Assume you’re going to prison, and ask yourself: if the only thing the judge knows about me is that I talked—what does that say?

Hugo Mejia had no cooperation to offer. What he had was proof. He documented changes in his daily life so the judge saw more than the crime in front of him.

Cooperation alone won’t separate one defendant from another. The ones who stand out are those who show remorse, involve their families, secure support, and show, through records, how they’ve worked to make amends.

Because that’s what shows the judge it wasn’t just about a deal—it was about a change.

If you’re thinking about cooperating, ask yourself why. If it’s only to avoid prison, you may be disappointed. But if you’re pairing that cooperation with serious personal work, you give yourself the chance to make every part of your file work in your favor.

We cover this every Tuesday at 11AM Pacific / 2PM Eastern—what cooperation means, what it doesn’t, and how to avoid putting all your weight on a government motion that may not carry you as far as you think. Don’t just cooperate. Prove that you’re worth the court’s trust.

Justin Paperny

Read Our New York Times Article

And Lessons From Prison, Free!

This is a staging environment