°F
weather icon can not load weather

Man who set off explosives at Lincoln County home Wednesday died from self-inflicted gunshot wound

A Nevada man who authorities say set off several homemade explosives in front of a Lincoln County home on Wednesday died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, the Clark County coroner said Sunday.

Coroner John Fudenberg ruled 59-year-old Glenn Franklin Jones’ death a suicide. Fudenberg said that blunt force injuries from the explosion also contributed to his death, and that he believes Jones shot himself in the head after igniting the explosives that tore through a home in Panaca.

Jones’ body was blown up in the blasts in Panaca. Fudenberg said the body was identified through fingerprints.

A motive for the bombings hasn’t been disclosed. Federal, state and local authorities are still investigating the type of fuses or detonators used to trigger the powerful Wednesday evening blasts.

“He definitely ignited the devices,” Lincoln County Sheriff Kerry Lee said. “We don’t know what with.”

A damaged semi-automatic handgun was found in the rubble following the blast, and Lee said authorities believe Jones it used to kill himself.

Lee said residents Tiffany Cluff and two daughters fled barefoot from the house before the blast. Husband Joshua Cluff and another daughter weren’t home at the time. The sheriff said the family of five has been cared-for since the explosions by family and friends. Messages left for the Cluffs by AP haven’t been returned.

“I guess he was bent on destruction, but not killing,” neighbor Richard Katschke said of Jones, a former nurse who once cared for Katschke’s mother at Grover C. Dils Medical Center in the neighboring town of Caliente.

Katschke and another neighbor, Dennis Sanders, said Jones knew the Cluff family and helped the Cluffs build the house that was badly damaged.

A hospital administrator confirmed that Jones and the Cluffs worked together as nurses, and that Joshua Cluff was Jones’ supervisor.

Lee said investigators were trying to confirm whether Jones had military experience.

Sanders said Jones told him he’d been an explosives and demolition expert in the Army. Katsche said Jones seemed fascinated with military memorabilia, but didn’t say he’d been in the service.

Both described Jones as quiet and courteous, but Sanders said Jones appeared to be struggling to lift himself out of depression following the deaths of his wife and his mother.

Police in the northwest Arizona town of Kingman found several pounds of explosives and improvised bombs in a motorhome where Jones had been living in recent weeks in a recreational vehicle park.

The Cluff home in Panaca was left uninhabitable, Lee said. The rented Ford Flex that Jones drove there was obliterated.

The sheriff said a crater 3 feet deep and 10 feet around was left where the vehicle was parked, and large chunks of debris landed up to a mile away.

Review-Journal reporter Max Michor contributed to this report.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
How much does it take to be among Nevada’s rich?

The richest of the rich live not in a state, but in Washington, D.C., where it takes a salary of $719,000 to land in the top 5 percent of earners.

 
Valley of Fire building new visitor center

Nevada officials say the new visitor center at Valley of Fire State Park will feature “state of the art” exhibits that explain the park’s cultural and geological history.