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St. Peters woman gets 5 years in prison for torching businesses in Puerto Rico

Luichy's Seaside Hotel in the Puerto Rican municipality of Cabo Rojo was one of four businesses seriously damaged in a Jan. 2 fire that was later determined to be arson. The woman who set it, 37-year-old Danielle Bertothy, of St. Peters, was sentenced to five years in prison on Monday.
United States Attorney for the District of Puerto Rico
Luichy's Seaside Hotel in the Puerto Rican municipality of Cabo Rojo was one of four businesses seriously damaged in a Jan. 2 fire that was later determined to be arson. The woman who set it, 37-year-old Danielle Bertothy, of St. Peters, was sentenced to five years in prison on Monday.

A St. Peters woman will spend five years in federal prison for a January fire that seriously damaged four businesses in Puerto Rico.

U.S. District Judge Gina R. Mendez-Miro issued the sentence to Danielle Bertothy, 37, on Monday in federal court in San Juan. In addition to serving prison time, Bertothy will be on supervised release for three years and will have to pay restitution. That amount will be determined in the next three months.

Prosecutors and defense attorneys had jointly recommended a five-year sentence, which is the minimum under federal law for an arson conviction. 

"We were pleased the court imposed the lowest sentence allowed by law," said Bertothy's attorney, Justin Gelfand. "Danielle looks forward to putting this behind her."

Bertothy pleaded guilty in July to a single count of arson, admitting that she started a fire outside the bar she had been asked to leave twice after becoming belligerent with staff. No one was killed or injured in the fire, though a hotel in the building had to evacuate about 40 guests. Some of the restitution is to reimburse those guests for belongings destroyed in the fire.

"I forgave her. I really forgave her. I don't have anything else in my heart. I'm calm and ready to move on," said the hotel's owner, Ángel Luis Marrero Negrón. He spoke to reporters in Spanish on the day of the hearing, according to El Nuevo Día. "If she truly is remorseful, my apology is another point for her to keep moving forward and rectify her life and never do what she did ever again — to what she did to our business and our lives."

All four of the businesses appear to have reopened.

St. Louis Public Radio's Brian Munoz contributed to this article.

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Rachel Lippmann
Lippmann returned to her native St. Louis after spending two years covering state government in Lansing, Michigan. She earned her undergraduate degree from Northwestern University and followed (though not directly) in Maria Altman's footsteps in Springfield, also earning her graduate degree in public affairs reporting. She's also done reporting stints in Detroit, Michigan and Austin, Texas. Rachel likes to fill her free time with good books, good friends, good food, and good baseball.