Pubdate: Sat, 06 May 2000 Source: New York Post (NY) Copyright: 2000, N.Y.P. Holdings, Inc. Contact: http://nypostonline.com/ Author: Maggie Haberman DRUG-BUSTER COLONEL'S WIFE GETS 5 YRS. FOR COKE RUNNING The coke-addicted wife of a U.S. Army colonel wept on her lawyer's shoulder and apologized for "destroying" her family yesterday as a federal judge sentenced her to five years for smuggling drugs from Colombia. With her husband and two young, sobbing sons in the front row of a Brooklyn federal courtroom, Laurie Anne Hiett told Chief Judge Edward Korman that she was looking forward to starting her life again after she gets out of prison. "If I was able to understand what [smuggling drugs] was going to do to my kids, and how it was going to destroy my husband, I would've never done it," Mrs. Hiett, 36, said. "I was miserable every day when I was a cocaine addict. Once I'm through with my punishment, I'll be able to live the rest of my life happily," she said. "'Sorry' is the word that you use when you step on someone's toes, and we say we're sorry when we kill someone. I'm not exactly sorry. I'm more than that. I am ashamed." Mrs. Hiett, who had faced up to nine years in a lockup, asked Korman to let her start serving her sentence immediately. On top of the prison term, Korman gave her five years of supervised release after she's out of the slammer, and ordered her to undergo therapy and a 500-hour drug rehab program behind bars. Mrs. Hiett, who was indicted last August with two accused co-conspirators, pleaded guilty in January to mailing heroin-stuffed packages to New York from the U.S. Embassy in Bogota, where her husband, Col. James Hiett, oversaw a $250 million-a-year anti-drug effort. She admitted she made two trips to Queens to pick up illicit profits from her drug sales. Last month, her husband - who was cleared of any involvement in the drug trade by Army investigators - pleaded guilty to not telling authorities what he knew about his wife's activities. James Hiett, who faces three years in prison when he's sentenced on June 23, would not comment yesterday. His wife's lawyer, Paul Lazarus, asked Korman to grant Mrs. Hiett leniency, insisting that "she's salvageable" and understands what she did wrong. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg