Slain Austin bomber had identified more targets
The serial assailant, who blew himself up as authorities pursued, also had a ‘confession’ on his cellphone.
PFLUGERVILLE, Texas — Hours after a serial bomber blew himself up as authorities closed in, investigators discovered that the homegrown Texan who had killed two people and terrorized Austin for 19 days had left behind a list of future targets and a 25-minute “confession” on his phone, officials said Wednesday.
After hundreds of investigators swarmed Austin in recent days to stop the bomber, it was a combination of high-tech surveillance and old-fashioned shoe-leather investigating that led officials to Mark Anthony Conditt, 23, who had no criminal record.
However, Conditt’s motive remains unknown, and officials suspect that “we are never going to be able to put a rationale behind these acts,” said Austin Police Chief Brian Manley.
In Conditt’s confession video, “he does not at all mention anything about terrorism, nor does he mention anything about hate,” Manley said. “Instead it is the outcry of a very challenged young man talking about challenges in his personal life that led him to this point.”
The series of bombs used similar components that made it easy for officials to link the devices: unusual batteries, apparently purchased online from Asia, and nails used as shrapnel, according to Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas, the Republican chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee.
Trying to find the buyer of the nails, officials “went to every hardware store” in the area to find customers who had made large purchases, and they struck gold with a Home Depot store in the Austin suburb of Round Rock, McCaul said in an in-
terview with The Times.
“The fatal mistake that led law enforcement to him — because he was pretty good at evading surveillance cameras — was when he walked into Home Depot,” McCaul said.
Investigators obtained surveillance video of Conditt walking into the store in a wig and walking back out to a vehicle with a license plate connected to his name.
From there, McCaul said, investigators obtained a cellphone number linked to Conditt, which had been turned off for “a while” — until Wednesday morning.
When Conditt turned on the phone, McCaul said, investigators were able to pinpoint him at a hotel in Round Rock, which led to a police chase.
Officials described a harrowing scene at the end of the pursuit. After Austin police forced Conditt off the road to prevent him from getting on a freeway, officers surrounded the vehicle and banged on the windows, at which point Conditt set off a blast that sent officers flying backward. One officer suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
“Your officers, officers you have known for years, charge into what we knew was a dangerous situation,” Manley said.
An officer also fired a gunshot at the vehicle, said authorities, who didn’t clarify whether that was before or after the explosion or whether Conditt was killed as a result of “significant injuries” from the blast or by a gunshot.
Officials, who discovered a bomb-making room in Conditt’s home in the Austin suburb of Pflugerville, haven’t offered any theories for why he embarked on a bombing campaign that left two people dead, four others injured and an entire city unnerved.
But they discovered at least one chilling piece of evidence after the hunt was over: a “target list” with “additional addresses we believe he was using for future targets,” McCaul said. Officials said they still don’t know how or why Conditt chose his targets.
“If we had not found this man, there would have been more devices, and more innocent civilians would have been hurt and been killed,” said FBI Special Agent Christopher Combs.
Investigators detained and questioned two of Conditt’s roommates Wednesday as officials sought to determine whether Conditt had any help in the string of bombings.
“Anyone who’s connected with this guy is going to have a sit-down interview to see if there is a web” of people involved, Combs said.
Officials announced they had filed a federal bombpossession charge and arrest warrant against Conditt late Tuesday, shortly before he died, and officials had considered pursuing the death penalty. ABC reported that in the final two packages of explosives sent out by FedEx, the bomber had used the sender name “Kelly Killmore.”
A portrait emerged Wednesday of an introverted Christian conservative who was home-schooled and worked at a manufacturing company before being fired last year, with much still unknown about his life over the last year.
In a statement released to CNN, Conditt’s parents said they were in shock and grieved for the bombing victims. “We are devastated and broken at the news that our family could be involved in such an awful way,” the family said. “We had no idea of the darkness that Mark must have been in.
“Our family is a normal family in every way. We love, we pray, and we try to inspire and serve others. Right now our prayers are for those families that have lost loved ones, for those impacted in any way, and for the soul of our Mark. We are grieving and we are in shock.”
In Pflugerville, federal and local law enforcement officials searched two sheds and trash bins outside the Conditts’ multistory home. The shades were drawn, and a U.S. flag flew out front.
Austin police homicide Det. David Fugitt said Conditt’s family had been “very cooperative,” adding that officials didn’t have any indication the family knew Conditt was involved with the bombings.
“They’re having a difficult time,” Fugitt said. “It’s understandable with everything they have had to deal with. This is certainly a shock to the conscience.”
Conditt took classes at Austin Community College from 2010 to 2012 and was home-schooled, according to college officials and social media posts from his mother, who said he graduated high school in 2013.
“He’s thinking of taking some time to figure out what he wants to do … maybe a mission trip,” said a Facebook post by Danene Conditt announcing his graduation, which included a photo of Mark Conditt.
In an old blog under Mark Conditt’s name, started apparently as part of a community college class assignment, the author wrote in 2012 that he was conservative but “not that politically inclined.” He wrote posts opposing abortion, favoring the death penalty and arguing that gay marriage should be illegal.
“I view myself as a conservative, but I don’t think I have enough information to defend my stance as well as it should be defended,” read the blog’s biography page. “The reasons I am taking this class is because I want to understand the U.S. government, and I hope that it will help me clarify my stance, and then defend it.”
In a post in favor of the death penalty, the author wrote, “Living criminals harm and murder, again — executed ones do not.” The blog’s final post is dated May 2012.
One of Conditt’s former friends, Jeremiah Jensen, 24 — who was home-schooled in Pflugerville and attended the community college at the same time as Conditt — said that Conditt’s blog posts for class were being taken out of context in media reports.
“Certainly a lot of the home-school community in Pflugerville, Texas, is conservative, and a lot of kids were raised that way,” Jensen said. “I think a lot of people jump to conclusions and want to make him out to be a conservative terrorist. But I think it has more to do with loneliness and anger than it has to do with anything else.”
Conditt was smart, “strait-laced” and “definitely came off as a little intense, and it was hard for him to get along with people and make friends,” said Jensen, now a freelance journalist living in Dallas. “A lot of people didn’t really understand him or how to speak his language.”
But “he was actually a very kind person, when I knew him,” said Jensen, adding that the two had not spoken for several years.
Community college officials said that Conditt was a business administration major and did not graduate, but that he left in good academic standing.
One of the Conditt family’s neighbors, Beverly Canales, 56, a stay-at-home mom, said she did not know the family, although her two daughters, ages 23 and 24, attended Austin Community College about the same time Mark Conditt did.
“Our little town of Pflugerville had our own Unabomber,” she said.
Mark Roessler, 57, lived across the street from where Conditt lived with his two roommates, and he sometimes chatted with Conditt and Conditt’s father, who came over occasionally to help remodel the home.
“It’s a quiet neighborhood, and he blended right in,” Roessler said.
Conditt worked for several years at a local semiconductor manufacturer, Crux Manufacturing, before he was fired in August for poor performance, according to KVUE-TV. The business’ owner, who spoke to the TV station anonymously, said Conditt “seemed like a smart kid who showed a lot of promise.”
Investigators began zeroing in on Conditt over the last two days, and officials were moving to make an arrest at the Round Rock hotel when Conditt began driving away, Manley said. A pursuit ensued, culminating in the roadside showdown in which Conditt was killed.
His death followed days of rapid developments in the case. On Tuesday, a bomb inside a package exploded on a conveyor belt at a FedEx shipping center in Schertz, northeast of San Antonio and about 60 miles from Austin. One worker was treated at the scene for minor injuries.
It was the fifth in a series of bombings this month. A sixth bomb was found intact at another FedEd facility near the Austin airport.
“I really wish that I could have spoken to him one more time before he went down this path,” Jensen said of Conditt. “I wish I had known that he was struggling or ... had some sort of an inkling to reach out to him.… It’s in the dark that people start getting angry and sad and eventually go off the deep end.”
molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com matt.pearce@latimes.com Hennessy-Fiske reported from Pflugerville, Texas, and Pearce from Los Angeles.