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Austin bombings: Four explosions in a month, what we know now


Austin, Texas (CNN) Austin police just confirmed what residents have feared for weeks -- a suspected serial bomber is attacking their city.

For the fourth time this month, a device exploded on Austin residents. What makes Sunday night's blast especially terrifying is that the device was left on the side of a residential road and triggered by a tripwire, police said Monday.

Investigators have found similarities between that device and three previous bombs, which were stuffed inside packages and left on residents' doorsteps, Austin Police Chief Brian Manley said.

"We are clearly dealing with what we expect to be a serial bomber at this point," he said.

The latest device -- which was triggered by a tripwire -- shows "a higher level of sophistication, a higher level of skill," he said.

And unlike the victims of the previous blasts, the two men wounded in Sunday's explosion are white, Austin police said. Both men are expected to recover.

Latest developments

Police departments in Houston and San Antonio are sending bomb technicians and canine teams to Austin to help in the investigation, their police chiefs said Monday.

President Donald Trump has been briefed on the Austin bombings, a White House spokesman said Monday, adding the White House pledges its support to local law enforcement.

Three members of the Congressional Black Caucus called Monday for federal officials to classify the bombings as terrorist attacks and determine whether they are "ideologically or racially motivated."

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced more than $265,000 in emergency funding for police to purchase seven portable X-ray systems for use in detecting bombs and investigating suspicious packages.

The Travis Country neighborhood of Austin was on lockdown Monday, Manley said, as authorities investigate the pieces of evidence strewn across a wide area.

Manley asked anyone in the neighborhood with security camera footage to call police.

The Austin public school district says it couldn't send buses to the affected neighborhood Monday because of police activity.

An indiscriminate wake-up call

Many minority residents in Austin have been on edge since the bombings started, as the first three bombings killed or wounded minorities.

Several residents under lockdown Monday said they were stunned the latest attack happened in their neighborhood.

Unlike the first three bombings, which happened in east Austin, the latest attack happened in a predominantly white part of town.

Eliza May said because the first three bombings happening on the east side of the city, in predominantly minority areas, she hadn't been following the news closely.

May said that as a resident of the affluent Travis Country neighborhood , she assumed she had nothing to worry about.

"We feel safe. This isn't something that you'd expect around here," May said.

Now, "it's obvious that you have to be alert."

"This was a random bomb," she said. "This could have been any one of us."

Neighbor Shonda Mace said the bombing "is going to be (a) life-changing event for our neighborhood."

"I'm scared about what's going to happen next," she said.

Tripwire could give clues

"The use of a tripwire is far less discriminating than leaving parcel bombs at residences and suggests that the latest victims were not specifically targeted," the global think tank Stratfor Threat Lens said.

"The device's success, despite significantly different design, further suggests that the bomb maker behind these attacks is an accomplished one, and has likely to have received some training, perhaps as a military or police explosive ordnance disposal technician."

"As the bomb maker changes up design and geography, all residents of Austin and surrounding areas should avoid suspicious items," Stratfor Threat Lens said.

'Extra level of vigilance' needed

The latest blast came less than a week after police said the three previous explosions -- in a span of 10 days -- were connected. Those blasts killed a man and a teenager, and wounded two others.

Police are working under the belief that the explosions are related. Manley said they'll get a better idea with a post-blast analysis and examination of the device components.

In the meantime, Manley told residents not to touch or go near anything that looks suspicious.

"We now need the community to have an extra level of vigilance and pay attention to any suspicious device -- whether it be a package or a bag, a backpack -- anything that looks out of place," Manley said Monday. "Do not approach items like that."

APD is asking the public to remain vigilant and report anything suspicious. If you come across ANYTHING that looks suspicious, DO NOT touch, handle or disturb it. Keep a safe distance and call 9-1-1 immediately. pic.twitter.com/buJsLqeRy5 — Austin Police Dept (@Austin_Police) March 19, 2018

More resources for police

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced the release of $265,500 in emergency funding Monday for the Austin Police Department and the Texas Ranger Response Team to purchase seven portable X-ray systems.

The systems can be used at the scene and provide "clear visual evidence for rapid assessment of a package's safety," the governor's office said.

"I want to ensure everyone in the Austin region and the entire state that Texas is committed to providing every resource necessary to make sure these crimes are solved as quickly as possible," Abbott said in a statement.

Other Texas law enforcement agencies are contributing resources as well.

The Houston police department said Monday it's sending several teams to Austin to help with the investigation. They include bomb technicians, an explosive ordnance disposal team, and an explosives-trained dog and handler, Chief Art Acevedo said Monday.

"We stand with the Austin Police Department," Acevedo said.

The San Antonio Police Department dispatched two bomb technicians and a bomb dog to Austin on Monday morning, Police Chief William McManus said.

Shortly before the fourth bombing, the reward for information leading to the arrest of anyone responsible for the three blasts increased to a total of $115,000, authorities said.

Officials have urged residents to call police with any tips they may have, even if the information seems to be "inconsequential."


More than 500 officers and agents have been called in to assist with the investigation, including F.B.I. profiling experts from Quantico, Va., who were trying to build a profile of a possible perpetrator, said Christopher Combs, special agent in charge of the bureau’s San Antonio office.

“We don’t know why the bomber is doing this. We don’t know his reasons,” said Mr. Combs, adding that the authorities were especially hoping to understand why whoever was behind the bombings was wielding “this level of violence.”

“We would really like the bomber to contact us so we can talk to him,” he said.

So far, the police have been alerted to more than 600 packages deemed suspicious, as residents have phoned and emailed friends and family to verify the provenance of parcels before opening them.

Chief Manley signaled that the authorities could be getting closer to labeling the attacks as domestic terrorism. “We will have to determine if we see a specific ideology behind this, or something that will lead us along with our federal partners to make that decision,” he said.

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He said the fourth bombing demonstrated a higher level of sophistication than the previous three, as well as a “significant change” in the way the victims were targeted.

In the first three bombings, cardboard boxes were discovered outside homes, seeming to target specific individuals. The packages were not delivered by the Postal Service or any other package delivery company, but instead appeared to have been left outside overnight. They detonated when they were handled by the people who discovered them.

The fourth bomb, however, which exploded on Sunday, was left on a roadside, and was believed to have been detonated with the use of a tripwire by two random passers-by, Chief Manley said. He warned residents that a future bomb could also be connected to a tripwire, which can be fashioned from hard-to-see materials such as fishing line or filament.

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“We have a high degree of confidence that the same individual built all these devices,” Fred Milanowski, special agent in charge of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in Houston, told reporters.

He declined to discuss details of the latest bomb’s construction, but described the way that tripwire explosive devices are assembled.

“In general, the tripwire is going to be attached to a switch, and it’s going to be anchored down on the other side, obviously, so that when somebody actually trips on it, they will activate that switch,” he said. “That’s why we call it a victim-activated device. It’s random. It’s not targeted. The randomness that a child could have come across that is very concerning to us.”

With so little known about who is behind the attacks and whether they will continue, the city is on edge, with many residents appearing unsure of whether to proceed with normal life or stay in hiding.

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“I think everyone in Austin is in the process of trying to figure out exactly how nervous to be,” said Stephen Harrigan, an author and essayist who has lived in Austin for more than 50 years and whose home is about eight miles from the scene of Sunday’s explosion.

“Are these bombings targeted acts of murder with a specific motive behind them — which is horrible enough — or do they represent something broader and more random?” he said.

Thad Holt, 76, who lives in the gated condominium community of 5000 Mission Oaks a few miles from Sunday’s bomb site, said an occasional car break-in is the kind of crime most typical in the neighborhood.

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“It’s too close for comfort,” Mr. Holt said. “It sort of puts you on edge. It puts the whole town on edge.”

Richard Herrington, 75, a retired pharmacist who lives about a half-mile from the blast site, said he and his family had gone hiking Sunday afternoon near the street where the tripwire was set and went off later that evening.

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“My oldest granddaughter, age 7, said, ‘Grandpa, I want to walk on the street where there’s the most shade,’” Mr. Herrington said. “We could have very easily walked down that street because there is shade. We could have been on that street and maybe the tripwire was there already, I don’t know. I’m anxious for our community because we don’t know when and where it’s going to happen again. I feel like it will happen again.”

At about 8:30 p.m. on Sunday, Mr. Herrington said, he and his wife were watching an N.C.A.A. basketball game when the blast occurred. “I was in the military. Never in combat. If you’ve been in the military and you hear a mortar round go off, it has a thump. And that’s how I knew it was a bomb, because it was a distinctive thump like that.”

The four neighborhoods where the explosions have occurred are varied economic and demographic slices of Austin. The first three bomb scenes were in largely working- and middle-class sections of northeast and east Austin, with sizable black, Hispanic and Asian populations. Hammocks and baby swings hang from tree branches on front lawns near Haverford Drive, the site of the first bombing on March 2. The explosion on Sunday took place in Travis Country, an upscale planned community that is largely white. It is a hilly and wooded area near a patchwork of busy highways and parkways.

After the first three bombings, many community leaders and residents speculated that the attacks appeared to be hate crimes, because those injured were black and Hispanic.

The first package killed Anthony Stephan House, a 39-year-old black man, after he discovered it outside his home. The second targeted two more African-Americans — Draylen Mason, 17, who was killed, and his mother, who was critically injured after she brought the package inside from their front porch and opened it in the kitchen. The third left a 75-year-old Hispanic woman seriously injured.

The explosion Sunday, which injured two white men, suggested that the bomber or bombers were driven by something other than racial bias.

In Monday’s news conference, the authorities said they had received a large number of tips on who could be behind the attacks, but that so far, none had led to the identification of a suspect.

In news conferences, officials have begun to take the unusual step of appealing to the bomber or bombers directly.

“I will reach out to the suspect or suspects and ask that you contact us,” Chief Manley said. “There are innocent people getting hurt in this community and it needs to come to a stop.”


CLOSE Two men were hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries after another explosion rocked residents in southwest Austin. USA Today

Police continue to restrict access to the neighborhood at the site of Sunday's explosion, early Monday, March 19, 2018, in Austin, Texas. (Photo: Eric Gay, AP)

Four mysterious explosions in Austin this month have killed two people and wounded four more. Police are still trying to determine if all of them are connected.

Here is what we know:

When did the bombings begin?

The first package exploded March 2, killing Anthony Stephan House, 39, when he picked up a package on the front porch of his northeast Austin home. The second bomb went off March 12 inside a home in east Austin. Draylen Mason, 17, was killed and his mother was hospitalized. The third blast came a short time later in a neighborhood south of downtown. A 75-year-old Hispanic woman picked up a package on her front porch when it exploded, seriously injuring her.

What happened in Sunday's blast?

A bomb blast, possibly set off by a tripwire, injured two men in southwest Austin. Austin Police Chief Brian Manley provided few details on the incident and wouldn't say whether the explosion was definitively linked to the blasts that have fueled fears across the city. Austin Mayor Steven Adler said Monday that “there are indications it was related to the first three.”

More: Austin Police to bomber: We hope you are watching and will call us

What was different about the latest bombing?

The first three attacks involved suspicious packages left on doorsteps. The package Sunday apparently was left on the side of a road. The latest explosion took place on the west side of Austin, the others were on the east side. Manley said the possible use of a tripwire in Sunday's blast "changes things." Authorities had been warning residents not to handle unidentified or suspicious packages left at their homes. Now residents must have an "extra level of vigilance" and not even go near packages, bags or backpacks they see anywhere, he said.

What is the motive for the attacks?

Police say they have no idea why the bomber is setting off the explosions. Before Sunday's blast, Manley held a televised news conference, pleading for the bomber to come forward. "We assure you, we are listening and we want to understand what brought you to this point, and we want to listen to you, so please call us." Authorities said hate crimes had been considered. The victims of the first three attacks were black and Hispanic. Sundays victims were white males.

Is there a reward for information?

Manley said a reward was increased to $100,000 from $50,000 for information that leads to an arrest in the case. That, along with an award from the governor's office, brings the total reward to $115,000.

Skip in Skip x Embed x Share CLOSE AUSTIN, TEXAS DEALS WITH SPATE OF BOMBINGS A fourth explosion could be linked to Austin bombings | 1:34 Two men were hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries after another explosion rocked residents in southwest Austin. USA Today 1 of 7 Skip in Skip x Embed x Share CLOSE AUSTIN, TEXAS DEALS WITH SPATE OF BOMBINGS Federal agents swarm Austin explosion area | 0:52 Federal agents swarmed the Austin, Texas neighborhood where an explosion injured two people on Sunday night. Police aren't saying if it was caused by a package bomb like the three that detonated earlier this month elsewhere in the city. (March 19) AP 2 of 7 Skip in Skip x Embed x Share CLOSE AUSTIN, TEXAS DEALS WITH SPATE OF BOMBINGS Police: 'Tripwire' may have set off Austin blast | 1:39 The Austin, Texas police chief says a person coming into contact with a tripwire may have set off the Sunday night explosion in that city. It follows several other blasts in Austin. Two men were injured. (March 19) AP 3 of 7 Skip in Skip x Embed x Share CLOSE AUSTIN, TEXAS DEALS WITH SPATE OF BOMBINGS Austin, Texas explosion injures two | 1:10 Another explosion has been reported in Austin, Texas, and police say two people were injured. The new blast was far from eastern parts of the city where three package bombs exploded earlier this month. (March 19) AP 4 of 7 Skip in Skip x Embed x Share CLOSE AUSTIN, TEXAS DEALS WITH SPATE OF BOMBINGS Police search for motive in Austin bombings | 1:17 Three package bombs left on doorsteps have exploded in less than two weeks in Austin, killing two people, wounding two others and leaving investigators searching for any possible explanation or motive. All of the victims were minorities. (March 13) AP 5 of 7 Skip in Skip x Embed x Share CLOSE AUSTIN, TEXAS DEALS WITH SPATE OF BOMBINGS Teenager is latest victim in Austin package explosions | 1:52 A 17-year-old boy is the latest victim in a series of deadly and unexplained package explosions in Austin. Authorities still have not identified a motive or suspect for the deadly attacks. KVUE 6 of 7 Skip in Skip x Embed x Share CLOSE AUSTIN, TEXAS DEALS WITH SPATE OF BOMBINGS Texas package bombs likely tied to earlier blast | 1:36 Two package bomb blasts a few miles apart killed a teenager and wounded two women in Austin on Monday, less than two weeks after a similar attack left a man dead in another part of the Texas capital. (March 12) AP 7 of 7 Last VideoNext Video A fourth explosion could be linked to Austin bombings

Federal agents swarm Austin explosion area

Police: 'Tripwire' may have set off Austin blast

Austin, Texas explosion injures two

Police search for motive in Austin bombings

Teenager is latest victim in Austin package explosions

Texas package bombs likely tied to earlier blast

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