Los Angeles Times

Austin bombing case intensifie­s

A fifth explosion occurs, but a package with a device that didn’t go off is found.

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com Times staff writers Noah Bierman in Washington and Michael Livingston in Los Angeles contribute­d to this report.

A fifth explosion takes place, but investigat­ors discover a package with a device that didn’t go off.

AUSTIN, Texas — As a string of bombings continued Tuesday near the Texas capital, authoritie­s recovered what could be the first crucial break in the case — an intact package containing an explosive device that may have been sent out for delivery by a serial bomber.

The package was found at a FedEx facility near the Austin airport. The discovery came hours after an early-morning explosion at another FedEx facility, 60 miles south of Austin in the town of Schertz.

It was the fifth in a series of bombings this month that have left two people dead, four others injured and rattled a city known for its urban cool.

Federal investigat­ors said on Twitter that both packages Tuesday were connected to the previous four devices, whose components were similar.

The package that exploded was apparently bound for an address in Austin. It detonated shortly after midnight. A FedEx employee was treated and released after complainin­g of ringing in her ears.

“We’re confident that neither this facility nor any in the Schertz area was a target,” said Schertz Police Chief Michael Hansen.

The intact package was found after police responded to a 6:19 a.m. call from the FedEx facility reporting it was suspicious. It contained an explosive device.

“They’re trying to figure out how to open the package without destroying it,” Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas), who had been briefed by investigat­ors, told the Austin American-Statesman.

He said the package as well as the bomb that exploded in Schertz had both been sent from the same FedEx store in the city of Sunset Valley, southwest of Austin.

Scott Stewart, a former investigat­or for the U.S. State Department and now a vice president of a global security firm, said the discovery could be a “gold mine” for investigat­ors. Even a sophistica­ted explosives expert, he said, could leave behind telltale signs like hair and fibers while assembling a device.

In another enticing lead, Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) told the Associated Press that federal authoritie­s informed him that they had surveillan­ce videos that “could possibly” show a suspect in the Schertz bombing.

He said he hoped the bomber’s “biggest mistake was going through FedEx.”

The bombings have reverberat­ed across the nation.

“This is obviously a very, very sick individual, or maybe individual­s … and we will get to the bottom of it,” President Trump said at the White House.

In the first three attacks, bombs were left on front porches. In the fourth one, the bomb was left alongside a roadway with a tripwire attached. The fifth bombing — the explosion early Tuesday — occurred as the package was being moved along a FedEx conveyor belt, being readied for delivery.

Late Tuesday, an employee at a Goodwill store in south Austin was injured when what police described as an “incendiary device” was left in a donation box. But authoritie­s said they had no reason to believe the incident was related to the package bombs.

Experts theorized the string of bombings is the work of a local man, perhaps someone with military or law enforcemen­t experience handling explosives, who has grown so brazen that he may have left key evidence behind, especially in the unexploded device.

“In many cases there will be a layoff, give it time to cool off after you attack. This guy has kept up the tempo,” Stewart said. “That tells me he thinks he’s better than the police.”

Stewart said he worried the bomber’s familiarit­y with explosives could lead him to plant new kinds of bombs, like pressure plates or sticky bombs that can be attached to the underside of cars.

It took 17 years for authoritie­s to catch Theodore Kaczynski, the so-called Unabomber, but that was before fingerprin­t and DNA databases expanded and government agencies began amassing biometric data from things like passports, Stewart said.

Security cameras and cellphone towers have also proliferat­ed, increasing the chances that investigat­ors can grab an image of whoever dropped off the package at FedEx.

Federal investigat­ors say the serial bombings are a national priority that have drawn 500 federal agents, support from national forensic labs in Quantico, Va., and the attention of the president.

Austin Police Chief Brian Manley told City Council members at a meeting Tuesday that investigat­ors were sending evidence to federal labs, which are reconstruc­ting the devices to determine what type of explosive charges were used.

“I cannot sit here and tell you whether there will be another incident. Based on the informatio­n we have, there is no reason to believe there will not,” Manley said.

Manley said it wasn’t clear whether an individual or group committed the attacks. He has tried to reach out to whoever is responsibl­e, asking for a dialogue to prevent further harm to residents. But hours after the Austin police made a public appeal in the case Sunday, increasing the reward for informatio­n to $115,000, the fourth explosion occurred.

Anthony Stephan House, a 39-year-old constructi­on worker, was killed March 2. Draylen Mason, a 17-year-old high school student, was killed March 12 in an explosion that injured his mother. Hours later, a third device exploded, injuring 75-yearold Esperanza Herrera.

Sunday’s explosion injured two men bicycling through a wealthy neighborho­od in southwest Austin, miles across town from the previous attacks. The two victims, identified by a friend and relative as former high school classmates Will Grote, 22, and Colton Mathis, 23, were in good condition Tuesday, a hospital spokeswoma­n said.

On Tuesday, would-be customers milled around outside yellow police tape strung across the parking lot at the FedEx store in Sunset Valley, watching investigat­ors in FBI and police jackets circle the building.

Jessica Wilkinson said she was there to celebrate her 37th birthday with her mother and sister at a nearby restaurant. She didn’t notice investigat­ors at first, thinking the police tape had been strung because of repairs.

“We didn’t know this was a crime scene,” she said. “Should we stay here?”

Wilkinson was concerned — she’s been receiving birthday gifts by mail, and expects more since her husband’s birthday is Wednesday.

She also worried about her sons, ages 8 and 4. Some of their classmates were evacuated from their homes following Sunday’s explosion. But she said the attacks had been too random to justify varying her daily routine.

Wilkinson’s mother, Kelly Metzler, 59, said she was reassured by the police presence and trusts the bomber’s seeming brazenness will lead to an arrest.

“He seems to be a bit braver — he’s hitting facilities now with security cameras that might be able to catch him,” she said. “This might be the last bomb — hopefully.”

 ?? Scott Olson Getty Images ?? FEDERAL AGENTS carry evidence from a FedEx store in Sunset Valley, Texas, from which authoritie­s believe two package bombs were mailed.
Scott Olson Getty Images FEDERAL AGENTS carry evidence from a FedEx store in Sunset Valley, Texas, from which authoritie­s believe two package bombs were mailed.

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