A week after state Sen. Carlos Uresti’s conviction in a salacious trial that included vivid testimony about him carrying on an extramarital relationship, his wife has filed for divorce.

Lleanna Uresti cited “adultery” among the reasons for seeking to end the couple’s nearly six-year union, according to the petition filed Friday in state District Court in Bexar County.

The San Antonio Democrat couldn’t immediately be reached for comment Friday evening.

Lleanna Uresti’s petition requests temporary orders preventing her husband from, among other things, contacting her, acting badly, withdrawing money from various accounts, and destroying or selling any property.

Lleanna Uresti seeks exclusive possession of their Helotes home, assessed at $1.6 million. She also says she should be awarded a “disproportionate share” of the couple’s estate for various reasons, including “fault in the breakup of the marriage” and “need for future support.”

The Urestis separated on Monday, the petition says, four days after Carlos Uresti was convicted by a federal jury on 11 felony charges in connection with his involvement in a now-defunct oil field company that defrauded investors. Uresti vowed to appeal. He is facing up to 12 years in prison and millions of dollars in restitution when he is sentenced in June, according to some local lawyers who spoke to the San Antonio Express-News last week.

Uresti, 54, served as outside general counsel for FourWinds Logistics. He also was a 1 percent owner and recruited investors. Among those investors was Denise Cantu, a Harlingen woman whom Uresti helped obtain a $2.5 million legal settlement over the deaths of two of her children in a 2010 vehicle wreck.

Cantu later invested $900,000 of the settlement with FourWinds on Uresti’s recommendation, losing about $800,000. She testified during his trial that she didn’t know he stood to get a cut of her profits.

Cantu told jurors that Uresti became her financial adviser, confidante, friend and eventually lover. She said their sexual relationship further bonded the grieving mother to Uresti. He has denied that the two were sexually involved.

Prosecutors say Uresti, under financial strain, “groomed” Cantu before defrauding her — gaining her trust over time, seducing her and persuading her to invest in the startup company he knew was a sham.

Cantu told investigators that her relationship with Uresti became intimate during the wrongful-death case. She recalled him telling her, “Damn, you look sexy today” when they were in an elevator on the day she had to give a deposition.

On one visit to Uresti’s law offices for a meeting on FourWinds, Uresti pulled her into a restroom “where she performed oral sex on him,” according to reports from the FBI.

Cantu described for jurors having sex in the bathroom shower at Uresti’s work. Prosecutors blew up on a screen for jurors a text exchange between Uresti and Cantu where he posed the question: “U want my big…?” Cantu explained that she understood that Uresti was referring to his genitals.

She also testified that Uresti once sent her a picture of his penis while he was on a shopping trip with his wife. Uresti’s defense team called Cantu a “demonstrated liar,” noting that she first denied to investigators that she and Uresti had been sexually involved.

Cantu has a pending fraud lawsuit against Uresti.

Uresti and his wife were regularly seen walking hand in hand or arm in arm while arriving and leaving federal court in San Antonio during the trial, which lasted nearly five weeks.

After the guilty verdict, the two held each other in a lingering embrace just outside the courtroom. He remains free on bail until sentencing.

On Wednesday, the Daily Beast reported that two more women came forward to report sexual harassment allegations against Uresti. It had reported in December that multiple women said Uresti ogled them, made lewd comments and sent them inappropriate messages. Uresti denied the allegations.

One of the two women now accusing Uresti, Jenn Cervella, who worked as a data director for the state Democratic Party, told the Daily Beast that she met the lawmaker in 2015.

“He was ogling my body. He spun me around so he could see what I looked like from behind. He wanted a 360-view,” Cevella said. “He made me feel like I was frozen and had no ability to say anything.”

Uresti and Margaret “Lleanna” Elizondo, a woman 12 years his junior, married on July 24, 2012. She is a former school counselor and real estate agent. The website HomeLight says she has sold 14 houses since 2012.

Uresti had served as her lawyer in her 2008 divorce from her previous husband, Joel Rodriguez, court records show. Uresti also represented his co-defendant, Gary Cain, 61, in his 2011 divorce case. Cain was a FourWinds consultant who was convicted on nine felonies.

The Urestis held their wedding reception at the ritzy Kendall Plantation, an antebellum-style venue in Boerne.

A video of their wedding dance — featuring Lleanna Uresti in a silver fringe ballroom mini-dress and Carlos Uresti in a tux sans jacket and tie prancing to the Bee Gees’ “More Than a Woman” and “I’m Glad You Came” by the British boy band The Wanted — has generated more than 21,000 views on YouTube.

Nside San Antonio magazine reported the wedding had a theme of “glamour, glitz, elegance, romance and ‘The Godfather.’” Carlos Uresti is a huge fan of the 1970s Mafia epic.

Houston Press reported that the wedding could be seen as part of a “TV” show that was “just an inexpensively made advertising vehicle for wedding vendors.”

After their wedding, the couple moved to a Helotes Creek Ranch home they had custom built on a nearly 3-acre lot. County records show that the construction was financed with a $1.2 million loan.

Prosecutors alleged that Uresti ignored numerous warning signs about FourWinds because he needed money to support his upgraded lifestyle. His monthly mortgage payment was $10,000, and he had payments on a $77,000 Porsche.

Prosecutors said Uresti’s financial troubles were so severe that he didn’t have enough money to make the first mortgage payment on the home.

Lleanna Uresti’s divorce petition comes as her husband is under pressure to resign from his Senate seat. He also is facing the loss of his livelihood as an attorney, as well as his freedom.

Uresti’s sentencing, set for June 28, could get postponed, given that he’s facing another criminal trial in May.

Uresti is accused of using his consulting business to split $850,000 in bribes with Jimmy Galindo, a former county judge in Reeves County. Uresti has denied those charges. Galindo has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery and failure to file a 2013 tax return.