Married lover of killer who murdered Fort Hood solder Vanessa Guillen pleads guilty to acting as an accessory and lying to the police after she was accused of helping bury remains in shallow graves – and now faces up to 30 years in prison
- Cecily Aguilar, waived her right to a trial and pleaded guilty to her involvement in the murder and dismemberment of soldier Vanessa Guillen
- Police said the Fort Hood soldier was bludgeoned to death and her remains buried by Army Specialist Aaron Robinson, with Aguilar assisting him
- Investigators confirmed that Robinson killed his fellow soldier after she saw a photo of Aguilar, a married woman, on his phone
- Pleading guilty on Tuesday, Aguilar faces up to 30 years in prison for serving as an accessory to murder and for lying to police during the investigation
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The alleged girlfriend of the man suspected of murdering and dismembering Fort Hood soldier Vanessa Guillen has pleaded guilty to involvement in the crime.
Cecily Aguilar, 22, waived her right to a trial on Tuesday and pleaded guilty to a single count of accessory to murder and three counts of making false statements.
She was the only person charged in connection to Guillen’s murder, after police said the 20-year-old saw a photo of Aguliar, a married woman, on Aaron Robinson’s phone, prompting the army specialist to bludgeon her to death and bury her remains.
Robinson died as cops moved to arrest him, with his death reported as a suicide.
Natalie Khawam, the Guillen family’s attorney, said the guilty plea was ‘another step on the long path toward justice for Vanessa, my client, and her courageous family.’
I will never stop fighting for my clients and will continue to seek and demand justice for victims and their families until it’s achieved.’
Aguilar is facing a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison, along with a $1 million fine and a 12-year parole after serving her time.

Cecily Aguilar, 22 (above), waived her right to a trial on Tuesday and pleaded guilty to her involvement in the murder and dismemberment of Fort Hood soldier Vanessa Guillen

Police said Guillen, 20, was bludgeoned to death and her remains buried by Army Specialist Aaron Robinson, who was assisted by Aguilar

The Texas Department of Public Safety confirmed that Robinson (pictured) killed his fellow soldier after she saw a photo of Aguilar, a married woman, on his phone
Investigators said the photo of Aguilar on Robinson’s phone was a part of the key evidence to the disappearance and murder of Guillen.
‘He told her he was worried about getting in trouble for violating the Army’s fraternization rules since Aguilar was still married to another soldier and he hit Guillen in the head with a hammer,’ investigators with The Texas Department of Public Safety said in May.
Aguilar at first claimed she was at home with Robinson the night Guillen disappeared but has since confessed to being there after Guillen’s body was found.
Investigators learned Robinson was the last person to speak to Guillen, despite telling police that Guillen was in the arms room and that he went to be with Aguilar, who backed up his claim.
Investigators later discovered that Robinson’s phone pinged in Belton, Texas, by a bridge near the Leon River in the early morning hours shortly after Guillen vanished.
When they went to the location, they found a burn pile, including a tough box, an item Guillen had been seen with earlier by eyewitnesses.
Investigators noted that Robinson and Aguilar shared multiple phone calls the night of Guillen’s disappearance, which Aguilar said was because she couldn’t find her phone.
On June 30, hours after investigators discovered Guillen’s dismembered body, Army officials at Fort Hood detained Robinson.
However, he managed to escape and was later spotted by Army and civilian police in the city of Killeen, just outside of Fort Hood, before he eventually shot himself.
Guillen, 20, was last seen at Fort Hood on April 22, 2020, in the parking lot of her barracks. She vanished after telling her family that she had been sexually harassed while on base.

Guillen, 20, (pictured) was last seen at Fort Hood on April 22, 2020, in the parking lot of her barracks. She vanished after telling her family that she had been sexually harassed
The Army designated her as AWOL two days after she vanished.
Guillen’s disappearance sparked a large-scale search, but her dismembered and buried remains were not found until June 30 at Leon River – 23 miles from where she was last seen.
According to a family lawyer, when Guillen’s remains were discovered, she had been bludgeoned to death with a hammer in the armory room where she worked and her body was transported from the installation by her killer.
Her remains were sent to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to be identified, attorney Natalie Khawam told CNN last July.
An independent review found that the Army’s Sexual Harassment and Assault Response and Prevention Program (SHARP) failed to curb sexual assault and harassment on bases due to structural failures.
Panelists said there was a lack of training, resourcing and staffing at the SHARP office on Fort Hood.
It also found that the command climate failed to practice the program’s core values below the brigade level, which led to less trust in the program. The actions come after a year that saw at least 31 soldiers assigned to Fort Hood die due to suicide, homicide or accidents, including the bludgeoning death of Guillen.