Michael Pimental
Vermont State Police search the home in Waterford of homicide victim Michael Pimental and his girlfriend, Krystal Whitcomb on Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2018. Photo by Alan Keays/VTDigger

BURLINGTON โ€” The girlfriend of a Waterford man whose body was found on the side of a rural dirt road in 2018 was sentenced in federal court Friday to more than a dozen years in prison on drug and firearms charges linked to that manโ€™s death.

Krystal Whitcomb. Photo courtesy Vermont State Police

Speaking near the end of a more than two-hour sentencing hearing in Burlington, U.S. District Court Judge Christina Reiss said she does not believe Krystal Whitcomb fired the bullets that prosecutors allege killed Michael Pimental outside his Caledonia County home.

But Whitcomb was โ€œat the centerโ€ of the conspiracy to murder Pimental, Reiss said, agreeing with prosecutors that Whitcombโ€™s role in the regional drug trade โ€” in which she allegedly sold up to 3,000 kilograms of opioids โ€” led to Pimentalโ€™s death. 

Whitcomb pleaded guilty last fall to conspiracy to distribute heroin and fentanyl and to possessing a firearm in a drug trafficking crime. The 31-year-old was not charged with murder, and prosecutors have identified another person as the alleged shooter.

โ€œThis is the kind of crime that has a big impact on the community,โ€ Reiss said Friday as Whitcomb sat across the courtroom. โ€œAnd the sentence needs to reflect that.โ€ 

Reiss handed down a 149-month prison sentence followed by five years of supervised release. The judge recommended Whitcomb serve her sentence at a federal prison in Danbury, Connecticut, and participate in a federal residential drug abuse program. 

Whitcomb had previously been charged in a federal indictment naming several other co-defendants, including the alleged gunman, John Welch, formerly of Woodsville, New Hampshire, and Michael Hayes, of Washington, D.C. 

Welch, Whitcomb and Hayes had all been charged in that indictment with using and carrying a firearm โ€œduring and in relationโ€ to a drug-trafficking crime during which the three โ€œcaused the death of Michael Pimental by murder.โ€

The U.S. Attorney for Vermontโ€™s office had sought a 17 ยฝ -year prison sentence, while attorneys for Whitcomb were seeking the mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years. 

Assistant U.S. Attorney Wendy Fuller told Reiss Friday that a key reason the government sought a sentence longer than the minimum was that prosecutors did not believe Whitcomb had accepted responsibility for her role in the drug trade. 

Fuller said Whitcomb lied repeatedly to investigators and prosecutors while in custody โ€” including during proceedings last year โ€” and changed her story multiple times in an effort to shield herself from culpability.

David Hoose, a Massachusetts attorney representing Whitcomb, agreed Friday that his client had โ€œtold many lies in this case,โ€ though he said the other defendants had lied, too.

Speaking to the judge, Hoose framed Whitcombโ€™s lying as a habit she had developed as a result of longtime drug use, equating his clientโ€™s situation with the phrase, โ€œyou can take the boy out of the country, but you canโ€™t take the country out of the boy.โ€

Reiss disputed Hooseโ€™s argument, though, saying that her court has seen people struggling with addiction but maintain โ€œmoral boundariesโ€ such as telling the truth. 

Whitcomb declined to make a statement before her sentence was read Friday. 

The Waterford womanโ€™s attorneys also framed her participation in drug trafficking as a product of Pimentalโ€™s โ€œobsessive controlโ€ over her, arguing that Pimental would force Whitcomb to do the often dangerous work of selling drugs for him. 

Pimental regularly abused Whitcomb both verbally and physically, Hoose said, calling her names and at times leaving her with black eyes and bruises. 

Whitcombโ€™s attorneys said in court filings that her drug use โ€œskyrocketedโ€ after starting  a relationship with Pimental, noting by the time of her arrest she was using 70-80 bags of heroin a day. Her drug use also was linked to โ€œcatastrophesโ€ in her teenage years, the attorneys said, including the death of her mother and an unplanned pregnancy. 

โ€œWhatever relevant conduct has been established by the Government is more than offset by the extraordinary abuse suffered by Krystal and by the mitigating circumstance of her drug dependency,โ€ her attorneys wrote in a sentencing memorandum filed last week. 

The U.S. Attorneyโ€™s office argued that while Whitcombโ€™s abuse was โ€œabhorrent,โ€ it did not excuse her continued participation in drug trafficking. They also alleged that Whitcomb stood to benefit from Pimentalโ€™s death, both because he was abusing her and because she would likely gain more control over the regional drug trade as a result. 

โ€œKrystal Whitcomb may have been a victim of Pimentalโ€™s abuse, but she is not a victim of this circumstance,โ€ prosecutors wrote in their sentencing memorandum. โ€œShe brought about the situation she finds herself in.โ€

Just before making her ruling Friday, Reiss said she felt a 10-year sentence could have been appropriate if not for additional run-ins Whitcomb had with law enforcement after her initial arrest in New Hampshire in October 2018, on the day Pimentalโ€™s body was discovered.

Whitcomb was released from custody in May 2020 to attend a residential treatment center, which she did, according to court documents. But by October that year she had violated the conditions of release twice, including by using marijauna. 

That month she was also found riding in a car pulled over by St. Johnsbury police, court documents show. Another passenger in the car, identified as her then-boyfriend, was โ€œactively involvedโ€ in distributing drugs, prosecutors said. A third occupant had crack cocaine and a scale on them, prosecutors said, and police found a gun in the car as well. 

Whitcomb did not report that interaction with police, or another in which she was found driving with a suspended license, to her probation officer, prosecutors said. 

Whitcomb was taken back into custody, court documents show, but went on to incur โ€œnumerous infractionsโ€ while lodged at facilities in Chittenden and Essex counties โ€” including drug possession and assault. 

Prosecutors noted these โ€œmajor infractionsโ€ took place after Whitcomb pleaded guilty in the case related to Pimentalโ€™s murder.

โ€œLike Krystalโ€™s chronic falsehoods, this conduct speaks volumes about whether Krystal appreciates the gravity of this case,โ€ prosecutors wrote. 

Hoose said Friday there was little he could say about Whitcombโ€™s actions following her 2018 arrest. He again argued that he believes they were a result of her involvement with drug trafficking and substance use.

Reiss, though, made it clear where she stood on the issue. 

โ€œThat was completely against your interests,โ€ the judge told Whitcomb across the courtroom. โ€œYou made a bad situation worse.โ€

VTDigger's state government and politics reporter.