Weepy wigmaker Miriam Yarimi apologized for wiping out a Brooklyn mom and her two young children with her speeding luxury sedan, just before catching a break and receiving a three-to-nine year sentence from a judge Wednesday.

The 33-year-old driver who prosecutors say was caught in a jail call saying, “Why should I apologize, I’m just as much of a victim as they are,” changed her tune before Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Danny Chun imposed her sentence.

“I want to begin by apologizing to the victims’ family,” she said, breaking into tears. “There’s a lot of sorrow and pain and honest regret I feel in my heart for causing such a tragedy. I accept full responsibility for my actions.”

One of her lawyers, Steven Legon, used a tissue to dab her cheeks as she cried during the sentencing.

Chun offered Yarimi the deal last month, despite the objection of prosecutors in Brooklyn D.A Eric Gonzalez’s office, who were asking for the maximum sentence of five to 15 years for the manslaughter charges. The deal means she will be eligible for parole after three years behind bars.

Yarimi was zipping north on Ocean Parkway in Midwood, her pedal to the floor and the odometer at 68 mph, when she blasted through a red light and crashed her Audi A3 into a Toyota Camry Uber at Quinten Road on March 29.

She then plowed into Natasha Saada, 35, and her three children, Diana, 8, Deborah, 5, and Philip, 4, who were crossing Ocean Parkway in the crosswalk.

The impact killed Saada and her daughters and left her son critically hurt.

Assistant D.A. Michael Boykin renewed his objection to the plea deal Wednesday.

“She used her cell phone while driving. She blew through multiple red lights. Unsurprisingly, the defendant, concerned only with her own safety, wore her own seatbelt. Unfortunately, she remained disinterested in who else she put at risk,” Boykin wrote in a blistering sentencing memo filed Tuesday.

“Her actions affected the lives of so many that day: three separate families, nine separate victims. They never stood a chance against the defendant’s 68 mile-per-hour, two-ton weapon.”

Boykin argued that Yarimi showed no remorse after her arrest, blamed the victims, and even discussed faking mental illness in calls with her ex-husband.

“I am playing the games… I could also pretend, you know… I could also, you know, put on a show… like, why don’t I just pretend I’m
schizophrenic?” she told her ex on a recorded April 22 call from Rikers Island, the prosecutor wrote.

And on April 30, when her ex suggested she apologize, she told him, “Why should I apologize? I’m just as much of a victim as they are.”

She asked him to “contact the judge,” then asked in a May 1 call, “Why isn’t the Jewish community helping me?

Right after the crash, Yarimi told cops, “The devil is in my eyes. I am haunted inside. I didn’t kill anyone. I didn’t hurt anyone. Prove it. Show me the proof. You have no proof.” She demanded a CT scan for her eyes and said she’d been “raped by cops” at age 14.

In a 2023 lawsuit, Yarimi alleged that an NYPD officer groomed and raped her throughout her teenage years after she was arrested for shoplifting. The city settled her suit for $2 million in December and the officer was fired from the NYPD in 2022 following allegations of stalking and harassment from another woman.