Corvallis:
A teenager accused of building bombs and plotting an attack on his high school in Albany, Oregon, has admitted to the allegations in juvenile court and was sent to a juvenile detention centre, which can hold him until his 25th birthday.
In a deal with prosecutors, adult charges, which included attempted aggravated murder, were dropped. Grant Acord, 17, yesterday admitted to six counts of manufacture of a destructive device and two counts of unlawful use of a weapon.
Citing the results of a psychological evaluation, which were not disclosed, prosecutors, the judge and defence attorney agreed the matter appropriately belonged in juvenile court.
"The potential act is very alarming to the public," said Judge Locke Williams. "I think given the heightened awareness of mental health issues and the effect that mental health issues can have on youth in particular, that we're very fortunate, and I think we owe a debt of gratitude to the young man who brought this to law enforcement's attention."
Police arrested Acord last year after receiving a tip from Truman Templeton, a West Albany High School classmate. Acord wrote detailed plans to "shoot and throw bombs throughout the school" and then kill himself, authorities said.
Templeton's mother, Leslie Templeton, said after the hearing that it was appropriate to transfer the case to juvenile court.
"It's all just really tragic," she said. "I'm glad it's over."
The plans, which included a step-by-step itinerary for an attack, were written in notebooks that were found hidden beneath the floorboards in the teen's bedroom, along with two pipe bombs, two Molotov cocktails and at least two Drano bombs, police said last year.
A detective wrote that the notebooks indicate Acord "compares himself to both Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold," the teenagers who killed 13 people at Columbine High School in Colorado in 1999 before turning their guns on themselves.
Before reaching a deal with prosecutors, Acord had been planning an insanity defense. His defence attorney, Jennifer Nash, had argued that Acord can distinguish right from wrong, but he was unable to follow the law because of a mental disorder.
Acord's mother, Marianne Fox, has said her son has a rare form of obsessive-compulsive disorder called Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal Infections, or PANDAS.
In a deal with prosecutors, adult charges, which included attempted aggravated murder, were dropped. Grant Acord, 17, yesterday admitted to six counts of manufacture of a destructive device and two counts of unlawful use of a weapon.
Citing the results of a psychological evaluation, which were not disclosed, prosecutors, the judge and defence attorney agreed the matter appropriately belonged in juvenile court.
"The potential act is very alarming to the public," said Judge Locke Williams. "I think given the heightened awareness of mental health issues and the effect that mental health issues can have on youth in particular, that we're very fortunate, and I think we owe a debt of gratitude to the young man who brought this to law enforcement's attention."
Police arrested Acord last year after receiving a tip from Truman Templeton, a West Albany High School classmate. Acord wrote detailed plans to "shoot and throw bombs throughout the school" and then kill himself, authorities said.
Templeton's mother, Leslie Templeton, said after the hearing that it was appropriate to transfer the case to juvenile court.
"It's all just really tragic," she said. "I'm glad it's over."
The plans, which included a step-by-step itinerary for an attack, were written in notebooks that were found hidden beneath the floorboards in the teen's bedroom, along with two pipe bombs, two Molotov cocktails and at least two Drano bombs, police said last year.
A detective wrote that the notebooks indicate Acord "compares himself to both Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold," the teenagers who killed 13 people at Columbine High School in Colorado in 1999 before turning their guns on themselves.
Before reaching a deal with prosecutors, Acord had been planning an insanity defense. His defence attorney, Jennifer Nash, had argued that Acord can distinguish right from wrong, but he was unable to follow the law because of a mental disorder.
Acord's mother, Marianne Fox, has said her son has a rare form of obsessive-compulsive disorder called Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal Infections, or PANDAS.
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