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Austin Victims Remembered For Resilience, Radiating Positivity
Draylen Mason was known as an accomplished musician who was heading to college, but he could also make you laugh before he even opened his mouth.
"You just expect to laugh with him. That boy was hilarious," said Sharrel Prince, who has known him since pre-K. "What made Draylen funny is that he says the things everyone else is scared to say."
The 17-year-old East Austin College Prep student was killed March 12 by a package bomb left outside his house in East Austin. His mother was also injured in the bombing.
According to high school friends, Anthony Stephan House was quiet, humble and self-assured, even at a young age. House, who was killed March 2, was a father and a graduate of Texas State University.
The victims' lives were claimed as part of a dramatic, weeks-long series of bombings in Austin that seemed to reach an end early Wednesday when a suspect took his own life as police closed in on him.
Caption: Anthony Stephan House (left), with his former Pflugerville High classmates Lee Rusk, Kevin Cotton, Jeff Lewis and Norrell Waynewood at their 20-year class reunion in 2016
"It was always a no-small-talk-type conversation with him," high school friend Kevin Cotton said about Anthony Stephan House. "I liked that about him."
Cotton, who now lives in Fort Worth, ran track with House and said the 39-year-old was a talented athlete. He was also a quiet guy who was well-liked.
"I've never seen him out there acting extroverted," Cotton said. "He was still cool, though. Everybody knew him."
House, who went by Stephan, attended Pflugerville High School in the '90s, and he received a degree in finance from Texas State University in 2008. He worked as a project manager for Texas Quarries until February 2017, according to the company. Friends said he had an interest in real estate.
According to news reports, House was married and had an 8-year-old daughter.
Continue reading
Photos: Courtesy of Austin Soundwaves, Courtesy of Tiffany Clay
Authorities say one employee at the sorting facility in Schertz, Texas, was injured when a package that was on its way to Austin exploded shortly after midnight.
AUSTIN, Texas -- Police in Austin say "similarities" between three package explosions in Texas' capital city this month, two fatal, lead them to believe the incidents are related. The latest fatal incident, reported Monday morning, killed a 17-year-old boy and wounded a woman, Austin police chief Brian Manley said.
Police: Third Austin package explosion linked to two deadly incidents -- live updates - CBS News
The victims all seem to be black thus far. Just a heads up.
UPDATE: 1 package bomb in Austin killed a Black man earlier this month. 1 package bomb in Austin killed a Black teenager and critically wounded an adult today. 1 package bomb in Austin critically wounded a 70 y/o Black woman today. If you live in Southeast Austin, be on red alert. DO NOT TOUCH OR MOVE OR OPEN ANY PACKAGES LEFT ON YOUR DOORSTEP.
Shaun King
https://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2018/03/02/us/ap-us-explosion-investigation-austin.html
BROWNSVILLE, Texas — A young girl and her parents were seriously injured Friday when a package they found outside their South Texas home exploded as they opened it inside, police said.
Their neighbor, Richard Solis, said he was drinking...
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www.sykesgroups.com/bec.html
Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/2013/01/11/4540987/3-injured-in-bomb-blast-at-south.html#storylink=cp
A package bomb sent to the Greek Embassy in Paris was discovered by authorities and safely disabled today, and caused no injuries or damages, an embassy official said.
The package arrived with no external markings, prompting suspicious embassy staff to call the police, the official said. The embassy was evacuated for about 40 minutes.
French police discovered a low-power explosive device inside, and detonated it under controlled conditions, the official said. The official was not authorized to be publicly named.
The Greek Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying the letter was delivered this morning to the embassy, listing the ambassador as recipient. It said it did not list a sender, but the indication was that it had been sent from Italy.
In Rome last week, a letter bomb exploded at the office of a tax collection agency, wounding an official. An Italian anarchist group claimed responsibility for the bomb and for sending another explosive earlier in the week to Deutsche Bank in Germany, which was intercepted.
Last year around Christmas, the anarchist group sent package bombs to three embassies in Rome, injuring two people. (The Independent)