Teens admit vandalizing churches

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Three 17-year-olds accused of vandalizing six Carson Valley churches with spray paint that depicted "666," upside-down crosses and obscenities, admitted their guilt Monday in juvenile court.

Ronald Bronk, Ryan Schuricht and Kylie Antti admitted to damaging property used for religious purposes. Bronk also was charged with willful injury to property for slashing two tires on a church daycare van. Antti was charged with graffiti at one of the churches.

"I spray painted the doors, walls, and windows with obscenities toward God," Bronk said. "There was no reason."

He also said he cut the tires on the left side of the Trinity Lutheran Church daycare van.

The vandalism spree covered 20 miles from north Douglas County to the Gardnerville Ranchos. Damage was discovered at Trinity Lutheran Church, St. Gall Catholic Church and Carson Valley United Methodist Church in Gardnerville, Day Springs Christian Assembly on Tillman Lane in the Gardnerville Ranchos and Hilltop Community Church and Shepherd of the Sierra Church in northern Douglas County.

Spray paint also was discovered at Douglas High School and town homes on Ironwood Drive.

Antti said she spray painted three of the churches. She told Gibbons that all the participants came up with the idea, motivated by the date.

Jonathan M. Walker, 19, an alleged accomplice, is set to appear in East Fork Justice Court today on six gross misdemeanor counts of damage to property used for religious purposes.

He is in Douglas County Jail on $50,000 bail.

On Monday, Gibbons released Schuricht and Bronk from juvenile detention.

He told the parents of all three juveniles that they were responsible for their children's behavior and were to contact authorities if the teens violated conditions of their release.

Probation officer John Enos asked the judge to leave the boys in detention.

"They're a danger to society, danger to the community and danger to themselves," Enos said.

He said Bronk and Schuricht were transient, "living in an old Ford Explorer."

Enos said that when the boys were questioned, Schuricht said he lived in the van "so we could do anything we wanted to do."

Schuricht's mother said her son had left home because he refused to follow the rules. But his lawyer, Tod Young, said Schuricht was attending Douglas High School as a junior and needed to take finals, which he could not do at the detention center.

"Your mother has indicated you are out of control," Gibbons told Schuricht.

"I will follow all her rules," the defendant said.

Gibbons released Schuricht, but ordered him to stay at the juvenile probation office after school until his mother gets home from work.

Gibbons set a July 10 disposition hearing for the juveniles. Punishment could range from probation to confinement in a juvenile facility.

He urged Bronk to find work because he faces the most in restitution.

Bronk was charged with six counts of property damage.

Schuricht had two counts of damaging property and Antti was charged with vandalizing three churches.

Prosecutor Derrick Lopez said a final damage figure had not been determined.

Arrests were made in the case about 36 hours after vandals used black spray paint to write profane remarks, the numbers 666, upside-down crosses and references to Satan at the churches.

The suspects were turned in by a parent who overheard them talking about the vandalism.

The graffiti was quickly cleaned up by church members and other volunteers.

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