Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Police probe links in Austin bombings

- Alan Gomez

An Austin teenager was killed and several other persons injured Monday when two packages left on doorsteps exploded, marking the second and third package explosions in the Texas capital in two weeks.

Austin police Chief Brian Manley said the three incidents displayed enough similariti­es to lead police to investigat­e them together. Because two of the victims were black and one was Hispanic, Manley said, investigat­ors were also viewing the attacks as possible hate crimes.

His department is working with the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to determine whether the three bombs were similar and to identify who built them.

Gov. Greg Abbott offered a $15,000 reward for informatio­n leading to the arrest of the person who planted the bombs.

In all three cases, packages were left on a doorstep during the night and residents found them in the morning.

The first incident occurred March 2 in a home in northern Austin. Anthony Stephan House, 39, was killed by the blast, but his death was not initially ruled a homicide because it was an “isolated incident.”

After two more explosions Monday, House’s death was reclassifi­ed as a homicide and added to the investigat­ion.

The first call Monday came at 6:44 a.m. A 17-year-old male and an “adult female” found a package on their doorstep and opened it inside their kitchen. Neighbors called police after hearing an explosion inside the house.

The teen died in the hospital. The woman received minor injuries.

As investigat­ors combed through the scene, residents from south Austin called police about another explosion inside a house. Police responded and found a 75-year-old Hispanic woman who also had found a package outside that exploded when she opened it.

Manley said she was facing “lifethreat­ening injuries.”

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