Los Angeles (AP) - The mother of a 20-year-old woman accused of making a terrorist threat aboard a cruise ship said she wouldn't post bail for a "brat" even if a judge had granted it.
"She is going to have to stay in jail and learn her lesson," Debra Ferguson told the Los Angeles Times. "This was a big, big problem, and if she has to sit in jail - oh well. She's going to have to deal with it."
Kelley Marie Ferguson, 20, remained jailed without bail Saturday at a federal detention center in Honolulu, according to Officer Lewis Gardner.
The cruise ship Legend of the Seas had been en route from Ensenada, Mexico, when it was diverted April 23 to Honolulu after two threatening notes were found. The notes prompted an FBI search for biological, chemical, radiological and explosive weapons, as well as interrogations of 2,400 crew members and passengers.
Kelley Ferguson, vacationing with her family aboard the ship, was accused of planting the notes so the trip would be cut short and she could get home to her boyfriend. She was charged with two counts of threatening acts of terrorism, and could face as much as 10 years in prison on each charge.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Kevin Chang on Thursday ordered her held without bail.
Her mother said she wouldn't post bail anyway and wasn't going to "risk the rest of my family's life because of a brat."
"She's going to run ... and we're going to be left with a $25,000 debt," Debra Ferguson said. "She promises not to do it again - but yeah, right."
The young woman's boyfriend, John Brashear, has said she's not a terrorist.
"She's not this kind of person," he said. "To think of her doing something like this is outrageous."
Prosecutors said they plan to send the charges to a grand jury next week.
Way to go, Momma!

"She is going to have to stay in jail and learn her lesson," Debra Ferguson told the Los Angeles Times. "This was a big, big problem, and if she has to sit in jail - oh well. She's going to have to deal with it."
Kelley Marie Ferguson, 20, remained jailed without bail Saturday at a federal detention center in Honolulu, according to Officer Lewis Gardner.
The cruise ship Legend of the Seas had been en route from Ensenada, Mexico, when it was diverted April 23 to Honolulu after two threatening notes were found. The notes prompted an FBI search for biological, chemical, radiological and explosive weapons, as well as interrogations of 2,400 crew members and passengers.
Kelley Ferguson, vacationing with her family aboard the ship, was accused of planting the notes so the trip would be cut short and she could get home to her boyfriend. She was charged with two counts of threatening acts of terrorism, and could face as much as 10 years in prison on each charge.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Kevin Chang on Thursday ordered her held without bail.
Her mother said she wouldn't post bail anyway and wasn't going to "risk the rest of my family's life because of a brat."
"She's going to run ... and we're going to be left with a $25,000 debt," Debra Ferguson said. "She promises not to do it again - but yeah, right."
The young woman's boyfriend, John Brashear, has said she's not a terrorist.
"She's not this kind of person," he said. "To think of her doing something like this is outrageous."
Prosecutors said they plan to send the charges to a grand jury next week.





