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Randy Budd provided this photo of his family, taken during happier times. The family is now gathered at Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, where Randy's wife, Sharon Budd, 52, is in critical condition after being struck by a rock thrown from an Interstate 80 overpass. Pictured, from left, are Luke, Kaylee, Joey, Sharon, James and Randy Budd.

MIFFLINBURG — Two juveniles have told police a 17-year-old is the teen who threw a rock from an Interstate 80 overpass that smashed through the window of a car, critically injuring a passenger.

The juveniles, identified in court documents as TGP and KLM, allege Dylan Lahr, 17, threw the rock, acording to arrest affidavits filed in the Mifflinburg office of District Judge Jeffrey Mensch.

Lahr and his 18-year-old brother Brett have been charged with aggravated assault, conspiracy, propelling missiles into a vehicle, possession of an instrument of crime and reckless endangering.

Sharon Budd, 52, of Uniontown, Ohio, was in the front passenger seat of the car driven by her daughter when the rock hurtled through the car windshield and struck her in the face.

She remained in critical condition Tuesday at Geisinger Medical Center near Danville.

KLM told investigators the four teens went to the Grey Hill Road overpass about two miles west of Route 15 in the New Columbia area in his car.

He alleged Dylan Lahr and TGP got out of the car and threw rocks onto the interstate.

TGP admitted throwing a rock but claimed it did not hit any vehicle, the document states. KLM and he told investigators Dylan Lahr threw at least two rocks and that one hit a car, the affidavit alleges.

When they saw the car slow and pull to the side of the highway, the four went to the Lahr home nearby, the document states.

The four returned to Gray Hill Road to observe what was occurring on the interstate, then went back to the Lahr home, state police said they were told.

Brett Lahr and KLM returned a second time and after observing several police cars on I-80, went back to the Lahr home, the affidavit states.

Troopers said they were led to the Lahrs after observing a gold Honda Accord twice slowly drive by on Grey Hill Road. When they ran the car's license plate they said they learned the vehicle was owned by Michael Allen Lahr of the same address as the brothers.

KLM and TGP will be charged as soon as Union County District Attorney D. Peter Johnson decides whether to charge them as juveniles or adults, state police said.

The preliminary hearings for the Lahr brothers have been continued until Aug. 19 before Mensch. Both are free on bail.

Budd, a seventh-grade language arts teacher, suffered a direct hit in the face by the rock, her husband Randy Budd said. Part of her skull was removed at Geisinger to allow her brain to swell and she has lost sight in her right eye, he said.

Their daughter, Kaylee, 19, who was driving, and Randy Budd, who was in the backseat, were not injured.

Randy Budd was headed to Somerset, N.Y., for business reasons but the couple had tickets for the play "Mamma Mia" in New York City. It was a business-pleasure trip, he said.