The prank . Write a story about someone who takes a fireworks to school and gets caught
Answers
Answer:
Last year, my friend saw how seriously emergency officials can react to illegal fireworks. A friend had dropped by his house in Murrieta for a small Fourth of July gathering and brought some aerial shells with him.
“He said, ‘Take a look at this,’” said Covarrubias, 43.
The friend set a shell into a mortar, lit the fuse, and they watched as it rocketed skyward and burst into brilliant sparkling colors with an explosive boom.
“Car alarms went off,” Covarrubias said.
He and his other guests hustled back into the house. His friend took off.
A short while later, when Covarrubias stepped out his front door, “there was the fire department and police. They saw it from the fire department at the end of my street.”
He wasn’t cited for the incident, he said, but the response left an impression on him. While he disagrees with the law, he’s not willing to take a chance on getting fined for illegal fireworks. Others are not so cautious.
Although there are only five cities in Riverside County and eight in San Bernardino County that allow any fireworks – and the ones sold in those communities are of the “safe and sane” variety – it isn’t unusual to hear or see fireworks being set off in neighborhoods throughout the Inland Empire. Many of them are high-powered explosives that can present a fire danger, particularly this year with vegetation dried out by a protracted drought.
The closest place to legally purchase such fireworks is Nevada. Many Californians venture to Las Vegas or the Laughlin area to buy boxes of pyrotechnics and sneak them back home – or try to.
San Bernardino County Fire Chief Mark Hartwig said investigators are on watch for anyone who illegally brings fireworks into the county from Nevada. Deputies recently confiscated more than 10 tons of illegal fireworks from motorists stopping at the agriculture inspection station near Yermo.
While many Inland cities have posted signs that say that Safe and Sane fireworks are illegal, some Inland law enforcement agencies will be more proactive in rooting out illegal fireworks on July 4 than others.
Fontana will have extra officers on the streets that night. If an illegal firework is spotted but nobody claims ownership, the homeowner will be held accountable and identified on the spot through the county recorder, Police Chief Rod Jones said.
Fontana police wrote 111 citations for illegal fireworks in 2014, Jones said. The minimum fine this year in the city will be $2,500.
State law sets the minimum sentence at a $500 to $10,000 fine, plus up to a year in jail, depending on the gross weight of the fireworks.
The Riverside County District Attorney’s Office has filed 17 illegal-fireworks cases since 2012, but that figure does not account for all fireworks cases, some of which are handled with municipal citations, spokesman John Hall said.
Answer:
Once there was a boy who took fireworks to school nd got caught XD
Explanation:
XDXD