Austin bombings: Suspect dead after detonating device, police say
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Austin bombings: Suspect dead after detonating device, police say
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Media captionāThe suspect is deceased,ā says police chief Brian Manley
A suspect linked with a series of deadly parcel bombs targeting Austin, Texas, is dead after a major police operation, officials say.
The suspect was killed after detonating a device when officers approached his car off an interstate highway in the Round Rock area of the state capital.
FBI agents are reportedly now carrying out an investigation at the scene.
The incident follows four bomb attacks in Austin, the state capital, and one in Schertz, 65 miles (104km) south.
Late on Tuesday, the Austin police department used footage from a FedEx store on Brodie Lane in south Austin to identify the suspect.
After using the Google search engine to gather information on the suspectās online browsing history, which showed searches on facilities which were used to ship packages, authorities later managed to locate his vehicle.
In the early hours of Wednesday, police and federal officers then took up positions around a parking area belonging to a hotel in Round Rock.
Image caption
Police investigate an incident involving explosives in Austin on Tuesday
As they waited for tactical teams to arrive, the vehicle started to drive away, forcing officers to pursue it.
When the vehicle eventually pulled over, armed officers approached, but the suspect then detonated a bomb, injuring one officer and causing another to open fire.
Skip Twitter post by @Austin_Police
APD is working an Officer Involved Shooting in the 1700 block of N. IH-35. Media staging area will be at the Sherwin Williams Paint, 3321 N. IH-35. APD PIO will be en-route.
ā Austin Police Dept (@Austin_Police) March 21, 2018
End of Twitter post by @Austin_Police
Police later confirmed that it was the blast that killed the suspect, who they said could not be named until he was positively identified and the next of kin had been informed.
Austin police chief Brian Manley said that local residents should āremain vigilantā, and urged anyone who noticed a suspicious package to contact the authorities.
āWe donāt know where the suspect has been over this past 24 hours,ā he said, adding that it was possible that additional devices may have been distributed.
Mr Manley also praised his colleagues in a tweet. āI canāt thank the men and women of #AustinPD or our Federal partners enough for their tireless work in restoring peace to our community,ā he said.
Earlier, CCTV images of a āperson of interestā were shared on US media showing a white male with blond hair carrying a number of large packages at a FedEx store in Austin.
Austin has been on edge amid the attacks, which have led to the deployment of hundreds of police officers to the city.
Two people have been killed and six injured in the bombings.
What do we know about the bombings?
Authorities have said that a series of blasts that began in Austin in early March ā involving package bombs and a tripwire ā were all related:
2 March: A device explodes at Anthony Stephan Houseās home in Austin, killing the 29-year-old man
13 March: Draylen William Mason, 17, is killed and his mother is critically injured after he brings a package inside his home from the doorstep in Austin
13 March: Hours later, a 75-year-old Hispanic woman, who has not been named, is injured by another package in the state capital
18 March: A device injures two men who may have set off a tripwire while walking along a street in Austin
20 March: A parcel bomb explodes at a FedEx depot in Schertz, slightly injuring one person. Police said the parcel had been due to be shipped to Austin
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Media captionTexas explosions: What we know about bombings
What has President Trump said?
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday praised the work of the authorities in Austin.
āGreat job by law enforcement and all concerned!ā he tweeted.
Mr Trump said earlier that āa very, very sick individual, or maybe individualsā carried out the blasts and pledged justice for the victims.