Austin, TX – Law enforcement and medics are responding to an explosion at a Goodwill store at 9801 Brodie Lane, according to Austin Statesman.
There is one patient reported at this time, the extent of injuries have not been reported.
The circumstances behind the explosion have not yet been released, as this story is still developing.
This is the second explosion in Austin on Tuesday. Earlier in the day there was an explosion from a package bomb at a FedEx facility.
UPDATE: The vicitm was going through a donation box when the device exploded. Authorities believe that there is a possible second device, according to Tony Plohetski.
UPDATE: The police department says that the device was not a bomb – it was an incendiary device. The device does not appear to be connected to the numerous package bombs.
UPDATE: Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said that law enforcement officials on the ground believe it’s the same bomber.
UPDATE: AG Paxton now says he spoke with the police chief and that he no longer thinks it’s the bomber. The chief announced that there were two “artillery simulators” dropped off at Goodwill and one of them exploded.
Police were called at 6:19 a.m. on Tuesday to respond to the FedEx location in the 4100-block of McKinney Parkway.
A medium-sized box exploded while it was on a conveyor belt, and one employee standing nearby was treated for injuries, police said.
FBI sources told KVUE the box was being mailed from Austin to Austin via FedEx when it detonated.
“It’s more than possible” that package was related to the explosions that have been happening in Austin since the beginning of March, FBI sources said.
Authorities believed the package explosion near San Antonio was the first time a bomb had been sent to a specific address via a mail delivery service of any kind. Police have said that packages which exploded on front porches and the trip wire that detonated another bomb on Sunday were all carefully placed by somebody who know what they were doing so that the explosions wouldn’t happen prematurely.
Prior to the explosion near San Antonio, police were crediting the Austin serial bomber with four package bombs in the past three weeks.
The bomber has changed up tactics, but authorities believed all were connected.
Sunday’s detonation happened a couple hours after a press conference where Austin Police Chief Brian Manley urged the bomber to turn themselves in, and more than doubled the reward for information leading to an arrest to $115,000, ABC News reported.
There were a lot of differences between Sunday’s bombing and the three previous attacks, police said.
The first three were package bombs, and were sent to black and Latino recipients. However, on March 19, two white men were injured by a blast that appeared to be set off by a trip wire.
“We’ve said from the beginning that we’re not willing to rule anything out just because when you rule something out you limit your focus,” Chief Manley told ABC News. “So this does change the concerns that we had initially although we have still not ruled it out until we understand what the ideology and motive is behind the suspect or suspects.”
The men were either riding or pushing bicycles when they triggered the blast, but police weren’t exactly sure how or where the trip wire had been strung, KTBC reported.
Police were unable to begin thoroughly investigating Sunday night’s explosion until daylight because of the dangers posed by the potential of other trip wires or booby-trap-type devices.
“There was a description that we may be dealing with a tripwire on this explosive and so out of an abundance of caution we’ve locked the neighborhood down to keep everybody safe and we’re going to go in at sun up this morning and begin processing the post-blast scene,” Chief Manley told ABC News.
On Monday morning, residents were told to stay inside their homes, children’s absences were excused from local schools, and anyone who needed to leave the area before police gave the all-clear signal was required to call 911 to get permission and an escort, according to KTBC.
“That concern is legitimate and real,” Austin Mayor Steve Adler said, addressing the anxiety of residents in the city.
The mayor said residents should be reassured by the “massive” police response to the bombings, and the “droves” of federal agents who were investigating the explosions with the Austin police, KTBC reported.
Despite the different delivery and victim characteristics, police said they believed Sunday’s explosion was linked to the two package bombs that exploded on March 12, and the first one that blew up on March 2.
“We are working on the belief that this is related to the other bomb incidents that have happened in our community,” Chief Manley told ABC News.
A 17-year-old boy was killed in the second bombing, and a 39-year-old man was killed in the March 2 blast.
On March 12, a package bomb exploded at about 6:45 a.m. in a neighborhood on the northeast side of the city, the chief said.
A 17-year-old found a package on the front steps of his house, brought it inside, and opened it up in the kitchen, where it exploded, FOX News reported.
The teenager was killed, and a 40-year-old woman was seriously injured, police said.
At about 11:50 a.m. the same day, police received a call about a second blast nearby.
A package had exploded in the Montopolis neighborhood, southeast of downtown Austin, according to FOX News.
On Monday afternoon, Chief Manley said that in the second incident, a 75-year-old Hispanic woman had opened a package that she found outside her home, and it exploded, too.
The woman was “significantly injured” by the blast and had life-threatening injuries, the chief said.
Anthony Stephan House, 39, was killed on March 2 after a “device” exploded on the front porch of his home in the city’s northeast Harris Ridge neighborhood, about 12 miles north of the first March 12 blast, FOX News reported.
The first three explosions took place within 16 miles of each other. Sunday’s blast occurred in a neighborhood just a few miles south of the third explosion scene.
Two of the first three explosions occurred in the early-morning hours, police said. Both of those packages were left overnight on the victims’ doorsteps, and were not mailed or sent by a delivery service, ABC News reported.
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