Kendra Gill, Bryce Stone,
Shanna Smith and John Reagh -- all 18 -- admitted to buying the
materials for the explosives, making the devices and throwing them from a
vehicle, according to a Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office probable
cause statement that CNN obtained.
Gill was crowned Miss Riverton in June, and was set to compete for the Miss Utah title, CNN affiliate KUTV reported.
Investigators began
getting calls late Friday night from Riverton residents who heard "loud
pops," said Capt. Clint Mecham of the Unified Fire Authority which is
investigating the case.
"The adults who were arrested were driving around in a car throwing these devices at property and people," Mecham said.
Authorities found plastic
bottles that contained household cleaning chemicals and aluminum foil
strewn in streets around the community, he said.
"Not only do you have to worry about shrapnel, these type of devices have chemicals" that can cause burns, Mecham said.
"This is not your average
kid blowing up a mailbox," he said. "These devices, they have the power
to create a fair amount of damage. They can maim or kill a person."
The teenagers allegedly throwing the devices could have been badly hurt, too, he said.
"They could have lost their lives, fingers, hands," Mecham said. "It's not a very smart thing to do all around."
Authorities interviewed
witnesses in two parts of town who described seeing a similar
dark-colored vehicle whose occupants were throwing explosive devices,
according to a probable cause statement. One of the witnesses identified
Stone as the driver and gave investigators his address.
Authorities went there
and questioned Stone, who allegedly implicated the three other teens,
saying they had been "pranking" with fireworks with friends, the
probable cause document says.
Stone allowed
authorities to search his car, where remnants of water bottles with
labels and sizes matching debris at the bombing scenes were recovered,
according to the document. A roll of aluminum foil, toilet bowl cleaner
and several water bottles containing multiple pieces of rolled-up
aluminum foil were also found, the document says.
Gill, Stone, Smith and
Reagh were taken into custody for questioning, and they admitted to
buying, making and throwing the explosives, according to the document.
The teens were booked into the Salt Lake County Jail on 10 counts each of setting off an incendiary device, Mecham said.
All the teens bonded out Sunday night for $50,000 each, said Cammie Scogg, a Salt Lake County sheriff's spokeswoman.
Salt Lake County
District Attorney Sam Gill told CNN on Monday that his office is waiting
for a full report from authorities to decide on whether to file
charges.
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