<snip>
NANTUCKET -- Not wanting their Nantucket holiday to end, the teenagers resorted to a desperate ploy to extend their good time, authorities said yesterday.
Prosecutors said the four called an island ferry service to warn, ''Don't let the ferry leave or it will blow up."
Their time on the island was indeed extended. All travel to and from the island was cut off Sunday night into Monday morning, while dozens of state and local police, on high terrorist alert after the July 7 London subway bombings, scrambled in search of a bomb that did not exist.
The teenagers were still on the island yesterday, in Nantucket District Court, where two girls and a boy were arraigned on one felony charge each of making a bomb threat, which carries a maximum prison sentence of 20 years. The fourth, a 16-year-old boy who lives on the island, faces charges in juvenile court July 26.
The three charged as adults silently appeared in court with their parents yesterday to hear the charges, one wiping away tears as she stood in flip-flops. The three were released on personal recognizance and are due back in court Aug. 17.
Authorities refused to detail exactly why the four teens allegedly called in the threat.
''They just didn't want to leave," said Thomas G. Shack, a prosecutor in the Cape and Islands district attorney's office. ''Some of the kids' parents have property on the island. All of the kids have a relationship to the island."
But three friends and an official who spoke on condition of anonymity said one teenager was headed for an SAT study camp, and the others did not want him to go.
Lawyers for the three teenagers said in court that none had prior criminal convictions. Two of the families are from Connecticut.
''These are good kids from good families," said R. Bradford Bailey, a lawyer who represents two of the teenagers.
Daphne K. Bragg, 17, lives on the island, but attends Brewster Academy in Wolfeboro, N.H., according to the teenagers' lawyers.
Brendan K. Reed, 17, attends Avon Old Farms School in Connecticut, where he is on the track and ski teams, maintains a 3.0 grade-point average, and recently returned from volunteering in Ecuador.
Brett A. Williams, also 17, attends Northwest Catholic High School in West Hartford, where she is a student peer leader.
A Nantucket teenager, who works with Bragg at a beach clothing store and who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the hoax was prompted by Reed's imminent departure from the island.
''The minute they hung up the phone, they knew they had messed up," said the teenager. ''They never meant to do anything."
The incident disrupted summer life on the tony island, in ways large and small. Hundreds of tourists were stranded, ferry companies and boat services lost money, and police expended resources chasing down the hoax.
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2005/07/21/teens_reluctance_to_part_tied_to_ferry_bomb_hoax?mode=PF