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Austin bombings: After fifth explosion, Donald Trump says it is a priority to ‘find these very sick people’ | Austin bombings: After fifth explosion, Donald Trump says it is a priority to ‘find these very sick people’ |
(about 1 hour later) | |
President Donald Trump has said that finding the “sick” people who have sent bombs to various locations in south central Texas is a top priority, seeking to reassure residents there is a heavy federal and local police presence to put an end to the series of attacks in Austin and now San Antonio. | |
“We have a lot of power down there, it’s not easy to find,” Mr Trump said from the Oval Office, just hours after a fifth bomb was detonated. | “We have a lot of power down there, it’s not easy to find,” Mr Trump said from the Oval Office, just hours after a fifth bomb was detonated. |
“We have to produce, we have to find these very sick people.” | “We have to produce, we have to find these very sick people.” |
The comments came as officials continue a desperate search for clues and answers after a fifth package in Texas exploded within a FedEx depot outside of San Antonio on Tuesday, spreading more fear after two lives have already been claimed and four others injured in previous attacks. Nobody was hurt in the explosion at the FedEx depot. | |
Federal officials have swarmed to Austin, where four packages have been detonated this month in a series of attacks that police say are likely related and have become increasingly sophisticated. The package that exploded on Tuesday outside of San Antonio was en route to Austin, and had originated in Austin as well, Texas attorney general Ken Paxton told local media. Federal investigators later said they believe that the explosion was likely related to the Austin attacks. | |
But officials have provided little indication that they are any closer to apprehending a suspect in the hours after the fifth blast, and have repeatedly asked the public to come forward with any information that could end this string of bombings. | |
“We are clearly dealing with what we expect to be a serial bomber,” Brian Manley, Austin’s interim police chief, said on Monday during a press conference after the fourth explosion on Sunday night, which was detonated by a trip wire. “The belief that we are dealing with someone who is using trip wires shows a higher level of sophistication, a higher level of skill.” | |
Police have repeatedly warned residents to stay away from any suspicious package, and said that even going close to one could be dangerous if it uses a trip wire – which could be any sort of thin thread and difficult to see. Austin Police Department has received 1,257 calls from concerned residents who have received potentially suspect packages in the past eight days, according to a tweet from the department. | |
A $115,000 (£82,000) reward has been offered for information leading to the arrest or conviction of the people responsible for the explosions in Texas, which has led the FBI to send at least 300 agents to Austin, in what FBI special agent Christopher Combs said was an “unprecedented” threat response in the city. | |
Austin mayor Steve Adler said he thinks the Sunday explosion is likely to increase tension in the city, and that concern is justifiable even though he says residents should feel more secure because of the heavy response from police and federal agencies. | |
“That concern is legitimate and real,” Mr Adler said on Monday. “That anxiousness is going to continue until we can find the answer.” | |
The first explosion occurred on 2 March, killing 39-year-old Anthony Stephan House after he brought a package in from his front porch. Mr House was taken to a nearby hospital but was later pronounced dead. At the time, police determined that the incident was an isolated event but that the FBI and agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were assisting in an investigation. | |
Two more bombs hit the city on 12 March, which led Austin police to say that those three incidents were likely related. The first on that day killed 17-year-old Draylen Mason and injured his mother, after Mr Mason brought the package in from the front step of his home to his kitchen, where it detonated. The second bomb, hours later, injured a 75-year-old woman in a different part of the city. | |
The most recent bombing, on Sunday, injured two bicyclists after they triggered a trip wire to detonate the device. | The most recent bombing, on Sunday, injured two bicyclists after they triggered a trip wire to detonate the device. |