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Watts sentenced to prison
January 5. 2011
Despite confessing to her crime, working to make reparations and a plea agreement she thought was iron-clad, Judge Steven Verby today handed down a hard sentence against Jennifer Watts, setting aside a plea agreement she'd reached with county prosecutors.

Instead of making her pay more than $130,000 in restitution, serve 180 days in the county jail and serve a long term of probation, as had been set in a plea deal, Verby apparently chose instead to make an example of Jennfer Watts, 40, Bonners Ferry, because, he said,  she had the background and experience to know better.

Charged with three counts of grand theft for taking money from her employer over the three years she worked for the International Selkirk Loop, Watts never denied that she'd made a mistake, exacerbated by her love of gaming. She didn't keep the money, she said ... she lost it in the machines at the Kootenai River Inn.

While she disagreed with the amount her boss Carol Graham said she may have taken from the International Selkirk Loop, she agreed early on to pay it back, and she never denied her guilt. At her sentencing hearing today, she gave Carol and the organization letters of apology, even while Graham testified against her.

Verby determined that, based on Jennifer's past experience as a Montana judge, as office manager in the Boundary County prosecutor's office and because she'd been going through Idaho Police Officer and Standards Training (POST) so as to qualify for a law enforcement position in Bonner County, she should well have known better.

He then handed down a harsh sentence; one year in prison, determinate, four years indeterminate. He ordered that she pay the International Selkik Loop $130,000 restitution and court costs. That was, for the most part, normal.

In most such cases, this kind of sentence is expected; the judge typically lays down the law and then retains jurisdiction, meaning the convict can do a few months at Cottonwood, do well and be released on probation.

To the shock of most in the court, Verby didn't retain jurisdiction, but remanded Jennifer immediately to the custody of the Sheriff's Office, to be made ready for immediate transport to state prison, where she will serve at least a full year before she can be considered for parole.

Though she cried, Jennifer stoically walked to jail, her husband at her side every step of the way.

In the wake of the ruling, even some prisoners wondered what Jennifer did to piss off Judge Verby.

"I can understand that he needs to set an example," one trusteee said during a break in raking up leaves, "But I don't know if he chose the right example. It doesn't seem fair. This one could bite him in the ass in the next election."