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BILLINGS (AP) - A Colorado man was sentenced Monday to 80 years in prison for killing a Montana teacher in a case that emerged as a chilling example of the social changes brought by the Northern Plains' oil boom.
Lester Van Waters Jr., 50, will not be eligible for parole for at least 20 years under the terms of the sentence, court officials said.
Waters pleaded guilty last year to deliberate homicide by accountability. State District Judge Richard Simonton suspended an additional 20 years in prison.
Authorities said Waters and an accomplice killed 43-year-old Sidney High School math teacher Sherry Arnold during an attempted abduction just blocks from her house on Jan. 7, 2012.
Her body was found more than two months later buried in a rural area of North Dakota.
Spell and Waters had traveled to Sidney from Colorado, using crack cocaine throughout their journey, according to authorities and previous testimony from the men.
They had told friends and family they were searching for work in the Bakken oil fields along the Montana-North Dakota border, where an oil boom has boosted agricultural communities but brought a spike in crime.
During their journey from Colorado, Waters allegedly told Spell that using crack "brought the devil out in him" and began talking about kidnapping and killing a female, according to an affidavit filed by prosecutors.
Authorities said Arnold was choked or otherwise asphyxiated after Spell tried to grab her. Spell said during a change-of-plea hearing in October that he was unsure if he or Waters had killed Arnold.
Waters made a deal with prosecutors that called for him to testify against Spell if the case went to trial. In exchange, Waters was spared the death penalty and prosecutors recommended he receive 100 years prison with 20 years suspended.
Prosecutors called two people to testify during Monday's hearing: FBI agent Craig Overby and state probation officer Wally Peter. Private investigator Richard Wood testified on behalf of the defense.
Waters had 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 Florida's Indian River County and served three state prison sentences between 2002 and 2010.
Spell has pleaded guilty to deliberate homicide. His sentencing has not been scheduled.
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