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Farmington • A former camp counselor charged with a seven felonies for allegedly sexually abusing a boy he met at camp has waived his right to a preliminary hearing.

Keldon S. Cook, 29, is charged in 2nd District Court with four counts of forcible sodomy, which are first-degree felonies. He was also charged with forcible sexual abuse and sexual exploitation of a minor, which are second-degree felonies, and dealing in harmful materials to a minor by an adult, which is a third-degree felony.

On Monday, Cook waived his right to a hearing where prosecutors must present enough evidence to show there is probable cause to advance the case to trial.

An arraignment hearing was set for Sept. 28.

According to charges, a 17-year-old boy told investigators that, when he was 14, he met Cook at an Especially For Youth overnight program at BYU. Cook and the teen communicated for the next two years.

"During these conversations, [Cook] talked to him in a 'disgusting way' and asked him inappropriate questions that were very confusing to the minor male because he 'looked up' to the defendant as [he] was his mentor and counselor at EFY," the charges state.

When the boy was 16, the two were "catching up" at a Davis County park when Cook allegedly made advances. The boy told police that Cook "persuaded him that the contact they had was acceptable … because he was his EFY counselor," the charges add.

Cook also allegedly sexually abused the boy two other times. He also sent sexual images to the boy over Snapchat, according to charges.

Police arrested Cook on April 8, at which time he admitted to "having a sexual relationship" with the boy, according to a probable cause statement. Cook has been held at the Davis County jail in lieu of $100,000.

This past school year, Cook worked as an assistant cheer coach at Alta High School in Sandy, said Canyons School District spokesman Jeff Haney, who added that district officials have "no reason to believe" that Cook abused their students.

Cook has no criminal history in Utah other than two traffic violations, according to court records.