A 19-year-old woman turned herself in to police on Wednesday to face charges for allegedly throwing two chairs off a 45th story balcony along a busy downtown Toronto street.

The incident shown in an online video, which was filmed on Saturday at around 10am, has sparked widespread outrage.

Det. Todd Higo said Marcella Zoia turned herself in.

A widely viewed video shot from the apartment balcony shows a woman throwing one of the chairs, which plummets to the street below.

The chairs landed near the front entrance of the towering condo, but there were no reports of injuries.

The apartment where the incident took place was reportedly an Airbnb rental unit, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Marcella Zoia, 19, is seen above hurling a chair off the 45th floor balcony of a downtown Toronto high rise on Saturday morning

Zoia turned herself in to Toronto Police on Wednesday. She allegedly threw another chair

The video, which was posted to social media, went viral and ignited outrage

Zoia was staying at an apartment in a luxury condo at 55 Bremner Boulevard in downtown Toronto

The chair is seen as it falls toward the Gardiner Expressway in downtown on Saturday morning. Luckily, no one was injured

A photo of the Airbnb listing shows the two chairs which are believed to be the same ones that were thrown over the balcony

A photo of the Airbnb listing shows the two chairs which are believed to be the same ones that were thrown over the balcony.

Airbnb said that Zoia has never used the service. Nonetheless, the company did suspend the account of a guest who booked a reservation at the building.

The company said in a statement: 'We are outraged by the blatant disregard for community safety on display in the video.

'We will be suspending any guest’s accounts that appear to be connected to this incident.'

Local housing advocates in Toronto said the apartment is one of several in the building owned by a single individual who advertises on Airbnb.

Advocates have urged lawmakers in Toronto to crack down on owners of multiple units who rent out the properties on Airbnb.

After receiving tips from the public, police identified Zoia and asked her to turn herself in.

Zoia, who is known on social media as an 'influencer', is charged with mischief endangering life, mischief endangering property and common nuisance.

She had 4,000 followers on her now-deleted Instagram account. Zoia also deleted her Facebook page.

Zoia made a brief court appearance Wednesday afternoon and was released on $2,000 bail and ordered to live with her mother.

She must also not have any contact with the four individuals that were with her at the time.

'She is embarrassed by what happened. She wished it never happened. Of course, she would never wish anyone would be hurt,' said Greg Leslie, her lawyer.

Zoia, who is known on social media as an 'influencer', is charged with mischief endangering life, mischief endangering property and common nuisance

She had 4,000 followers on her now-deleted Instagram account. Zoia also deleted her Facebook page

Zoia made a brief court appearance Wednesday afternoon and was released on $2,000 bail and ordered to live with her mother

Leslie said she understands the public outage. He said he'll have discussions with the prosecution and said it might not go to trial but said he'll see how it develops.

Leslie said she was under peer pressure and they are looking for the others involved.

Zoia left the courthouse smiling with a Starbucks Frappuccino in hand as she entered an Uber.

Constable David Hopkinson said the apartment was being used as a short-term rental.

Airbnb spokesman Ben Breit said the company reached out to Toronto police to offer their full support in their investigation 'of any individuals involved with this abhorrent act.'

'We remain outraged by the blatant disregard for community safety on display in the video,' Breit said.

'We have no evidence at this time to suggest that the accused has ever been an Airbnb user, but we have suspended the account of a guest with a reservation at the building pending further review.'

Jenna Periti, who has known Zoia from the time they attended St. Elizabeth Catholic High School, in Thornhill, Ontario, called her a smart girl and said the video 'does not do her justice.'

Jenna Periti, who has known Zoia from the time they attended St. Elizabeth Catholic High School, in Thornhill, Ontario, called her a smart girl and said the video 'does not do her justice'

She said Zoia came to Canada from Brazil just before ninth grade and lived with her mom

She said Zoia came to Canada from Brazil just before ninth grade and lived with her mom.

'She's a bright girl but sometimes she likes to hang out with people who like to get involved in the wrong things,' Periti said.

Tyler Walton said she believes she rented the same Airbnb unit, suite 4508, on the same day the chairs were thrown.

She said she was told by the host to arrive later because the previous renter left a 'big mess.'

Walton said she saw the chairs outside the front door of the condo building on the sidewalk.

She noted the balcony chairs advertised on the website were not on the balcony when she arrived.

The City of Toronto has examined banning shot term rentals not regularly occupied by the owner, but the potential rules are undergoing review.

'I just hope that people take from the example the consequences that will befall this woman. This is irresponsible behavior that is unacceptable,' Toronto Mayor John Tory said.

'It was not just a lark gone bad. It was grossly irresponsible behavior that could have caused serious injury and death.'