The Borneo Post

Texas serial bomber made video confession before blowing himself up

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PFLUGERVIL­LE, Texas: The serial bomber whose deadly attacks terrorised Austin, Texas, for weeks left a 25-minute video ‘confession’ on a cell phone found after he blew himself up as officers closed in to make an arrest, police said.

Mark Conditt, 23, an unemployed man from the suburb of Pflugervil­le, detailed how he made all seven bombs that have been accounted for – five that exploded, one that was recovered before it went off and a seventh that he detonated as officers rushed his vehicle. But the video failed to reveal a coherent motive for the attacks spread over the past three weeks, police said.

“He does not at all mention anything about terrorism, nor does he mention anything about hate, but instead it is the outcry of a very challenged young man, talking about challenges in his personal life,” Austin police chief Brian Manley told reporters.

“I would classify this as a confession,” Manley said.

Conditt, who had never before been in trouble with the law, killed two people and wounded five with a campaign of violence that began on March 2, authoritie­s said.

Based on their search of the suspect’s home and his video statement, authoritie­s said they felt confident that there were no other bombs and that the public was safe from further harm.

FBI special agent Christophe­r Combs said investigat­ors believe the suspect would have continued his attacks had he not been apprehende­d.

Police recovered a ‘ target list’ of addresses for future bombings,

He does not at all mention anything about terrorism, nor does he mention anything about hate, but instead it is the outcry of a very challenged young man, talking about challenges in his personal life.

the Los Angeles Times reported, citing US Representa­tive Michael McCaul of Texas, the Republican chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee.

Even so, the video gave no explanatio­n for the individual­s and addresses singled out as recipients of the bombs that were planted or shipped, Manley said.

Police previously said they had considered the possibilit­y that the attacks were racially motivated, noting that the first several victims, including the two who died, were either AfricanAme­rican or Hispanic.

Conditt likely recorded the video between 9pm and 11pm on Tuesday. According to Manley, Conditt said he believed police “were getting very close to him,” and he was right. Authoritie­s filed a criminal complaint and issued an arrest warrant around that time.

By Wednesday morning, police had tracked Conditt to a hotel and were waiting for the arrival of tactical units and equipment before they planned to make an arrest, Manley said. But then Conditt drove away.

Police followed and decided to stop him before he got on the highway. Just as officers approached the vehicle, the explosion went off, Manley said. There was also some police shooting.

“This can never be called a happy ending, but it’s a damn good one for the people of this community, the people of the state of Texas,” Travis County District Attorney Margaret Moore told reporters.

Residents in Austin, a city of 1 million people and a liberal enclave of university students and tech companies, voiced relief that the hunt for the serial bomber was over.

“I am going to be leery and extra careful tomorrow at work, but I feel relieved now,” said Jesus Borjon, 44, an employee of parcel delivery firm UPS, who lives in Pflugervil­le.

Austin was hosting thousands of out- of-town visitors for its annual South by Southwest festival of

Brian Manley, Austin police chief

music, film and technology when the first bombings occurred.

The trail of clues leading hundreds of investigat­ors to the serial bomber ranged from store receipts and fragments of boobytrapp­ed packages to surveillan­ce video of the suspect in a hat and wig.

Experts scoured the suspect’s home for further evidence, removing explosive materials and bomb components.

“I wouldn’t call it a bombmaking factory, but there’s definitely components consistent with what we’ve seen in all these other devices,” Fred Milanowski, special agent in charge of Houston office of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, told reporters.

Investigat­ors evacuated a fourblock radius around Conditt’s house while they searched the home, which Conditt shared with two roommates who had been detained for questionin­g. Conditt moved in a year ago after leaving his parents’ home about a mile away, public records showed.

One law enforcemen­t official involved in the investigat­ion but speaking on condition of anonymity told Reuters that some of the materials found in remnants of the bombs were traced back to where they had been sold.

The source also said investigat­ors, once they had identified Conditt as a potential suspect, obtained a warrant to monitor his Google search history.

Surveillan­ce video showed the suspect in a hat and a blond wig, as he prepared to ship one of two booby- trapped packages he was known to have sent through FedEx Corp’s delivery service, according to the source. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Law enforcemen­t personnel investigat­e the scene where the Texas bombing suspect blew himself up on the side of a highway north of Austin in Round Rock, Texas. — Reuters photo
Law enforcemen­t personnel investigat­e the scene where the Texas bombing suspect blew himself up on the side of a highway north of Austin in Round Rock, Texas. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Mark Anthony Conditt
Mark Anthony Conditt

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