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Man arrested after arranging to meet a 14-year-old girl for sex in Billings

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BILLINGS — Aaron Emil Angell is facing child sex abuse charges in Billings after he was caught in an online sting by authorities pretending to sell a 14-year-old girl for sex.

Angell, 38 years old, was charged Wednesday with felony sexual abuse of children in Yellowstone County Justice Court.

The investigation into Angell began in May 2019, when agents with Montana's Division of Criminal Investigation contacted an individual online through CraigsList.com posing as a pimp selling a 14-year-old girl as a prostitute, according to court documents filed by Yellowstone County prosecutors.

An unknown individual, identified online as "lickit up," conversed back and forth with the agent and expressed interest in the girl, eventually sending a photo of himself, according to the documents.

The man arranged for one meeting with the girl in May but never showed. He then reached back out to the agent on Monday and arranged a different meeting, agreeing to pay $85 to perform sex acts on the girl, prosecutors stated.

The man agreed to meet at the East Bridge Fishing Access site on Cerise Road and to send a picture once he arrived. He told agents he was driving a Chevy Suburban.

The agent received the photo, and another agent saw a vehicle matching the description driving up to the bridge, according to charging documents.

A Yellowstone County deputy approached the vehicle, pulled it over after it tried to flee and arrested Angell. He was booked into Yellowstone County jail, and bail was set at $20,000.

In an interview with police, Angell admitted that he was at the bridge to meet the 14-year-old girl for sex, prosecutors said. He also admitted to corresponding with the e-mail address that investigators had, prosecutors said.

If convicted, he faces a minimum sentence of four years and a maximum of life in prison, along with up to a $10,000 fine.

NOTE: The information above is from court documents and/or publicly-available information filed in the case, and do not necessarily provide all of the information relevant to the case. Defendants are considered legally innocent until proven guilty in court.