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‘We Are Clearly Dealing With A Serial Bomber,’ Austin Police Chief Says After Fourth Explosion

Two men – ages 22 and 23 – were injured in an explosion that police believe may have been set off by a tripwire. Police are asking anyone in the area with surveillance video to give it to authorities.

AUSTIN -- Austin's police chief Brian Manley said "we are clearly dealing with a serial bomber" hours after officials responded to an explosion in Southwest Austin Sunday night.

Related: Tripwire may have set off Austin blast; police chief urges 'extra level of vigilance'

Two white men -- ages 22 and 23 -- were sent to a hospital after an explosion that was possibly triggered by a tripwire went off March 18. Based on preliminary information, Chief Manley said the device that exploded March 18 has similarities between the devices that set off the three other blasts around the city during the month of March.

Residents in the Travis Country neighborhood are being asked to remain sheltered in placed until 2 p.m.

The latest attack came hours after the Austin Police Department increased the reward offering for the three prior explosion investigations to $115,000.

Officials said on March 18 they responded to the 4800 block of Dawn Song Drive in Southwest Austin at 8:32 p.m. for an explosion. The two men were transported to South Austin Medical Center with serious injuries, according to Chief Manley. At 11:30 p.m., hospital staff confirmed to KVUE's Christy Millweard that the two men were in good condition. They're expected to be OK.

Chief Manley said at a press conference Monday morning that they believe the two men were walking on a sidewalk or grassy area near a fence before the device went off. Police believe the device was sitting next to the fence.

More: Austin police plead with serial bomber: We hope you are watching and will call us

"That changes things in that our safety message to this point has been involving the handling of packages and telling communities 'Do not handle packages. Do not pick up packages. Do not disturb packages,'" Manley said. "We now need the community to have an extra level of vigilance and pay attention to any suspicious device -- whether it be a package, a bag, a backpack. Anything that looks out of place, do not approach it."

Police are asking anyone in the Travis Country neighborhood to provide police with video surveillance from their house if they have it.

Related: Austin bombings: Four explosions in a month, what we know now

Authorities are telling the public that, if they see anything suspicious that appears out of place, to not go near it and to call 9-1-1. Authorities also asked the public to be aware of the possibility of tripwires. They said it could be a fishing line or something similar, and that if it is moved or stepped on, it could go off.

Related: Austin on edge as police hunt for serial bomber after package explosions

This last confirmed explosion follows three others in the month of March -- two of which were deadly. The first was reported on March 2 in Northeast Austin in the Harris Ridge neighborhood. Anthony Stephan House, 39, an African American man, was critically injured after finding a package on his front doorstep. He died the same day at the hospital. The second explosion happened at a single-family home in Central East Austin on March 12. A 17-year-old African American boy, identified as Draylen Mason, was killed and an African American woman in her 40s was seriously injured. A few hours after the explosion that killed the teen, a 75-year-old woman Hispanic woman, identified as Esperanza "Hope" Herrera, was injured in the third explosion in southeast Austin after picking up a package left on her front doorstep. She remains in critical condition. During the media briefings for the first three explosions, police said they could not rule out the fact that the explosions might be a part of a hate crime. Police did not allude to the possibility of investigating a hate crime in the fourth explosion.

"We said from the beginning we weren't going to rule anything out because when you rule something out, you limit your focus," Manley said on Good Morning America March 19. "So this does change the concerns that we had initially. We have not ruled out [that this might be a part of a hate crime] until we understand the ideology or motive."

Police said the difference between the fourth explosion and the previous three is that it was not created by a suspicious package left on a doorstep. He added that investigators will use lab results to determine if all four explosions are, in fact, related to the same suspect(s).

As police, the FBI and ATF investigate these possibly linked explosions, a $115,000 reward is being offered to anyone with information regarding the cases. CLICK HERE to find out how to submit a tip.

Chief Manley said they need the public's help as they work to find a suspect.

"That's why we're pushing the message out that we need every tip, every piece of information," he said on GMA. "However inconsequential you think it is, that may be the one piece of evidence that we need."

Officials with Regents School of Austin, located in the 3200 block of Travis County Circle, said classes for Monday, March 19 are canceled as police sweep the area for suspicious items. Officials said all school athletic and co-curricular events on and off campus are canceled too.

St. Andrews Episcopal School said there was a two-hour delay Monday at the Southwest Parkway campus as officials swept the campus for suspicious objects. Staff said upper school classes will begin at 10:55 a.m. All classes at the 31st street campus will begin as normally scheduled.

St. Gabriel's Catholic School said on their website school would start at 10:30 a.m. due to all of the police activity in the area. Officials said security would sweep the area for suspicious packages or items beforehand.

Just after 12:30 a.m. Monday, Austin Independent School District said they would not send school buses to the Travis Country neighborhood Monday because of police activity due to the explosion. School officials said tardies and absences on March 19 would be excused. Any person that sees a suspicious object of some sort is asked not to approach it, and instead, call 911, officials said.

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