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©
2002 |
Homemade
bomb teaches some lessons
Four Sisters boys may be a little
humbler and a little wiser in the wake of an explosion that injured one
boy and got all four into trouble with the police.
On January 2, Deputy Allan
Borland responded to a report of a 13-year-old boy being injured by an
explosive device at a Sisters area home.
After interviews with several
young teens, sheriff's deputies learned that the injured youth had set
off an explosive made with a carbon dioxide canister, black powder and
a wick fuse.
The injured teen and two other
boys had gone into the woods near one boy's home and had tried several
times to light the fuse in the snow.
The last time the boy tried
to light the fuse, it was very short and the explosive detonated upon
lighting. The boy suffered injuries to his hand.
A parent was contacted and
she rushed home and took the boy to the hospital.
Deputies learned that the
explosive was purchased from another Sisters teen, who had made several
explosive devices. Borland told The Nugget that there was no indication
of malicious intent among the boys, noting that they were simply lighting
off the explosives in the woods, not using them to destroy anything.
"I think their intent was
to make big bangs," Borland said.
Nevertheless, the incident
was taken very seriously.
One youth was charged with
unlawful possession of a destructive device; unlawful manufacture of an
explosive device; and sale or gift of an explosive device to children.
The other youths were cited
for possession of an explosive device.
The charges are serious, though
they will be adjudicated through the juvenile justice system.
More serious still is the
physical damage that could have occurred and didn't -- by good luck as
much as anything else.
According to Borland, one
piece of shrapnel from the exploded canister was over an inch long and
could have been lethal.
"(The injured teen) got his
hand torn up, but the pieces that hit him in the hand could have got his
eyes or hit him in the chest," Borland said. "Somebody could have been
killed."
According to Borland, there
are indications that the teens learned a lesson from their experiment
with explosives -- and are sharing it with their peers.
"(The teens are) talking to
kids around school and telling them that what they did was really stupid
and they could have been really hurt," Borland said.
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