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Sidney Mayor Bret Smelser said Friday he was saddened by the new details in the case
-- and frustrated that he had not been able to get more money for his town to deal with the downsides of the oil boom. "Is this what it takes?" Smelser asked. "I'm not saying if I had the resources this wouldn't have happened. But we could have more options and with money we would have had a couple more police. We just don't have the resources to take care of ourselves." The FBI has been heavily involved in the investigation but no federal charges have been filed. For that to happen, authorities would have to prove Spell and Waters crossed state lines during the alleged crime
-- a difficult task given that Arnold's body has not been found. Aggravated kidnapping carries a potential death penalty in Montana unless the victim is released unharmed. The minimum sentence is two years in prison and a fine of up to $50,000. Spell and Waters are being represented by court-appointed public defenders. Telephone messages left Friday for the attorney who heads up the local division of the public defender's office, in Glendive, were not returned. The suspects most recently lived in Parachute, Colo., another area with extensive oil and gas drilling. Waters has a lengthy criminal background in Florida, where he lived until after his most recent release from prison in August 2010. Beginning in the late 1980s, he had several stints in jail in Indian River County, Fla., and served three state prison sentences between 2002 and 2010. Charges against him included possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, sale of cocaine, petty theft, burglary, failure to pay child support, contempt of court, resisting an officer and multiple counts of driving with a suspended license. Spell has prior arrests in Colorado on charges of drug possession, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, sexual contact without consent, careless driving and driving without a license. Charges filed against Spell in a pair of 2007 arrests were later dropped, although it was unclear on what grounds. The most recent charges came in 2009 after Colorado authorities said Spell asked a middle-school student to text other students and ask them if they wanted to buy marijuana. He was scheduled to be arraigned in that case in January. But Spell was given permission by a judge to leave Colorado just days before Arnold disappeared, after claiming his brother had been in a car accident in Texas.
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