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- THE WEEK NATION, Page 15Four Days in Hell
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- A kidnapper pleads guilty to the brutal $18 million Exxon
- extortion scheme
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- It was the most dramatic abduction in New Jersey since the
- Lindbergh baby disappeared in 1932. But unlike that kidnapping
- and murder, which has remained shrouded in mystery for decades,
- the details of the final four days of Sidney Reso came clear a
- little over four months after the 57-year-old Exxon
- International president vanished on his way to work April 29.
- Last week in a federal courtroom in Trenton, New Jersey, Arthur
- Seale, a former security officer for Exxon, recounted the grisly
- details as he pleaded guilty to extortion charges that could
- bring him up to 95 years in prison and $1.75 million in fines.
- Seale's plea reversal came on the eve of his trial, at which
- Irene Seale, his wife and co-conspirator, was scheduled to
- testify against him.
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- Seale, 45, described how he and Irene, in an attempt to
- extort $18 million from Exxon, ambushed Reso from a van parked
- in front of his Morris Township home. When Reso stopped to pick
- up his newspaper at the end of his driveway, "I yelled and
- grabbed him by the collar," Seale told the judge. "I pulled him
- into the van, and when he got into the van he went to turn and
- the gun went off." For four days, the couple held the badly
- wounded Reso without food and water in a locked wooden box in
- a self-storage locker they had rented. On the last day, the
- couple panicked as their victim -- dehydrated and possibly
- suffering from an existing heart condition -- neared death. "He
- actually died in my arms that afternoon," Seale testified, as
- the oil executive's widow stared intently at him. The couple
- buried Reso's body in a forest but continued to demand money
- from Exxon, pledging his safe return. Seale still faces state
- charges of felony murder and kidnapping, which could result in
- further life sentences for him.
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