Truro News

Suspected link

Package bomb explodes in Texas, this time at shipping centre

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A package bomb believed to be linked to the recent bombings in Austin exploded early Tuesday inside a Fedex distributi­on centre near San Antonio, leaving one worker with minor injuries, and a second unexploded bomb was found at the same facility, authoritie­s said.

Hours later, police sent a hazardous-materials team to a Fedex facility in Austin to check on a suspicious package there. There was no immediate word about whether that package contained explosives.

FBI agent Michelle Lee said the explosion happened around 1 a.m. at a Fedex facility in Schertz, which is just northeast of San Antonio and about 95 kilometres southwest of Austin. A worker was treated for minor injuries and released, police said.

“It would be silly for us not to admit that we suspect it’s related” to the four Austin bombings that have killed two people and injured four others since March 2, Lee said. She did not have details about the size, weight or descriptio­n of the package.

The package was on a conveyer belt when it detonated. One worker reported ringing in her ears after the blast. She was treated and released from a hospital.

Before it exploded, the package had been sent from Austin and was addressed to a home in Austin, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton told Austin television station KXAN.

Schertz Police Chief Michael Hansen said the intended target of the bomb was not the shipping facility or anyone in Schertz.

The Fedex blast came less than two days after another bombing wounded two men Sunday night

in a quiet Austin neighbourh­ood. It was triggered by a nearly invisible tripwire, suggesting a “higher level of sophistica­tion” than agents saw in three package bombs left on doorsteps, according to Fred Milanowski, agent in charge of the Houston division of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Authoritie­s have not identified the two men who were hurt Sunday, saying only that they are in their 20s and white. But William Grote told The Associated Press on Monday that his grandson was one of them and that he had what appeared to be nails embedded in his knees.

Police described the men’s injuries as significan­t, and both remained hospitaliz­ed Monday in stable condition.

Grote said his grandson was in a lot of pain. On the night of the

bombing, one of the victims was riding a bike in the street and the other was on a sidewalk when they crossed a tripwire that he said knocked “them both off their feet.”

“It was so dark they couldn’t tell, and they tripped,” he said. “They didn’t see it. It was a wire. And it blew up.”

Grote said his son, who lives about 90 metres from the blast, heard the explosion and raced outside to find both of the young men bleeding profusely.

The presence of a tripwire was a departure from the first three bombings, which involved parcels left on doorsteps that detonated when moved or opened.

The tripwire heightened fears around Austin, a town famous for its cool, hipster attitude.

“It’s creepy,” said Erin Mays, 33. “I’m not a scared person, but this

feels very next-door-neighbour kind of stuff.”

Police repeated prior warnings about not touching unexpected packages and issued new ones to be wary of any stray object left in public, especially ones with protruding wires.

“We’re very concerned that with tripwires, a child could be walking down a sidewalk and hit something,” Christophe­r Combs, FBI agent in charge of the bureau’s San Antonio division, said in an interview.

Police originally pointed to possible hate crimes but the victims have now been black, Hispanic and white and from different parts of the city.

Local and state officers and hundreds of federal agents are investigat­ing. The reward for informatio­n leading to an arrest has climbed to US$115,000.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Emergency vehicles sit in front of a Fedex distributi­on centre where a package exploded Tuesday in Schertz, Texas. Authoritie­s believe the package bomb is linked to the recent string of Austin bombings.
AP PHOTO Emergency vehicles sit in front of a Fedex distributi­on centre where a package exploded Tuesday in Schertz, Texas. Authoritie­s believe the package bomb is linked to the recent string of Austin bombings.

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