The Latest: Bombing suspect killed himself before blasts
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The Latest on the investigation of explosions in a small Nevada town (all times local):
10:57 a.m.
Federal, state and local authorities are still investigating the type of fuses or detonators used to trigger the powerful Wednesday evening blasts detonated by a man in a small Nevada town.
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Lincoln County Sheriff Kerry Lee says Glenn Franklin Jones "ignited the devices."
A damaged semi-automatic handgun was found in the rubble following the blast, and Lee said authorities believe Jones it used to kill himself.
Authorities say the 59-year-old man drove a rented car from Arizona to Panaca (pah-NAK'-uh), Nevada, and detonated two bombs at the house of former co-workers. He fatally shot himself before the blasts erupted, according to autopsy results made public Sunday.
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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.
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8:51 a.m.
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An autopsy found that the man who authorities say detonated two bombs that destroyed a home and a vehicle in a small Nevada town killed himself before the explosions.
Clark County Coroner John Fudenberg (FYOU'-den-berg) tells The Associated Press on Sunday that Glenn Franklin Jones shot himself in the head. His death was ruled a suicide.
Jones blew himself up in the Wednesday night blasts, but no one else was seriously injured.
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The family of five who lived in the house are OK.
Fudenberg says Jones was identified by fingerprints.
The detonations scattered debris more than a mile in Panaca (pah-NAK'-uh), a town of about 900 residents located 120 miles northeast of Las Vegas near the Utah state line.
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Police in Kingman, Arizona, found bombs and several pounds of explosives in a motorhome where Jones had been living in recent weeks.