The Binge Crimes: Lady Mafia - 19 Days | 4. Theories
Episode Date: April 22, 2024As terrified Eastside residents meet with leaders of the Austin community, the 600 plus local and federal authorities working around the clock on the case now grapple with a lack of leads. After a ser...ies of bomb threats shut down a concert at SXSW, the crisis grows even more intense when a tripwire bomb detonates on Austin’s southwest side, crippling two college students and putting a whole section of the city on total lockdown. From Campside Media, Pegalo Pictures and Sony Music Entertainment, this is Season 6 of Witnessed: 19 Days Unlock all episodes of Witnessed: 19 Days, ad-free, right now by subscribing to The Binge. Plus, get binge access to brand new stories dropping on the first of every month — that’s all episodes, all at once, all ad-free. Just click ‘Subscribe’ on the top of the Witnessed: 19 Days show page on Apple Podcasts or visit GetTheBinge.com to get access wherever you get your podcasts. Find out more about The Binge and other podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts and @campside_media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I'm Afua Hirsch.
I'm Peter Frankopan.
And in our podcast, Legacy, we explore the lives of some of the biggest characters in history.
This season, we are looking at the life of the British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill.
It's fair to say he's a complex and controversial character.
Almost 150 years since his birth, how does his legacy hold up today?
Follow Legacy now wherever you get your podcasts.
Or binge entire seasons early and ad-free on Wondery Plus.
This podcast contains descriptions of violence and harsh language.
Listener discretion is advised.
Campsite Media.
The Bench. The fact that the first three victims were black and brown definitely made it a race
issue.
Black lives matter!
Black lives matter!
Black lives matter!
Black lives matter!
Black lives matter!
Black lives matter! Black lives matter! Black lives matter! We felt like the East Side was not safe.
At that time, we didn't know who this person was.
We didn't know the motive.
But it felt that way from the people I talked to.
It felt that way from the community.
That's Chaz Moore.
He's the executive director of the Austin Justice Coalition,
a community organization focused on, as the
coalition puts it, improving the quality of life for people who are Black, brown, and poor.
By the middle of March 2018, three bombs had exploded in Austin. The victims, all of them,
were Black or brown. Given that pattern, it appeared that the bomber was targeting a specific
racial demographic. So Chas did what he does best.
He organized and advocated.
We had a meeting at Greater Mount Zion Baptist Church.
I called up Pastor Clark and was like,
we need to do this so people can come out and ask questions.
On March 15th, three days after the second and third bombings,
more than 400 people gathered for a town hall meeting at the Greater Mount Zion Baptist Church.
The church is about a mile from where Draylon Mason was killed by the second bomb.
The mayor was there, as was Police Chief Brian Manley and other law enforcement officials.
And they answered questions and addressed concerns as best they could.
We're here tonight to talk about the need for us to protect ourselves and get to know one another. So over the next five... Tasmor speaks to a crowd of more than 400 people
on the historically Black and Hispanic east side of Austin.
Josh Oihus from the Austin Bomb Squad was there too,
near the back.
I was super nervous the whole time
because it was just everybody who was anybody
was coming to this meeting.
There's so many key leaders at this one building.
Like if this person attacks here, it would be devastating.
People weren't scared.
You know, people were terrified.
You know, I remember we had got packages at the house
and my friends was like, absolutely not.
You had everybody like scared to open the door.
Questions are being asked and not really answered.
I think everybody's like, you know,
what the fuck is going on?
Somewhere in the city of Austin,
whoever was building these bombs
was plotting their next move.
And this one would change everything.
From Sony Music Entertainment, Campside Media, and Pegalo Pictures, this is Witnessed, 19 Days.
I'm your host, Sean Flynn.
Part 4. Theories Serial bombers are a rare breed.
Simply put, there aren't that many people with both the technical ability and sociopathic bloodlust to pull it off.
Yet when one does appear, he or she can be difficult to catch.
After all, they only become serial bombers
because they get away with it more than once.
Police in Austin were facing a law enforcement nightmare,
trying to stop random acts of terror
with few leads and only fragments of evidence.
They weren't the first cops to go through that.
In fact, the very first serial bombings in American history
followed a very similar pattern.
In the 1940s, somebody started to set off bombs in public places around New York City.
Department stores, subways, theaters.
That's Michael Canal, author of Incendiary, a book on this exact topic.
And at first, these were crude,
homemade pipe bombs, but they did not appear to be placed with intent to kill, although that would
change over time. The bombs became more sophisticated, they became more powerful,
and they became more dangerous. And while this was going on, a now defunct newspaper, the old Journal American,
received a series of letters from the bomber himself. And the publisher, a man named Seymour
Berkson, had the brilliant idea to write back to the bomber. And so this weird public correspondence
ensued. Yet in the mid-20th century, the investigative techniques and resources available to law enforcement,
and the bomb squads in particular, were rudimentary.
The bomb squads, as you can imagine, in the 1940s were very, very crude.
I mean, the pictures are almost comical.
I mean, these people are wearing almost like homemade protective gear, and they're carrying
the bombs to the back of a truck that looks like it would offer no protection at all. But bombings
were not commonplace at that time. And so it was not really a very developed science.
So instead of the scalpel of forensics, investigators often reached for the sledgehammer.
In those days, the way you caught criminals was you roughed up informants and you did this sort
of dirty street work to solve crimes. But aside from being just, you know, bad policing,
it didn't work. New York's Mad Bomber was still out there for 16 years. They had to try something different, something revolutionary.
In desperation, the head of the New York forensic crime squad went to a psychiatrist whose name was James Brussel.
They showed him all of the evidence, including the letters that the bomber had sent to the newspaper and james brussell he looked at all
of the evidence the phrasing in the letters suggested a slavic background it suggested
that english may not have been his first language there were clues to his frustrated sexuality
and he said the man you're looking for is from a Slavic background. He lives with
an older female relative. He has a history of workplace disputes. He's probably never kissed
a girl. And when you catch him, he'll be wearing a double-breasted jacket and it will definitely
be buttoned. And with those clues, the police eventually zeroed in
on a man named George Metesky in Waterbury, Connecticut.
George Peter Metesky.
The tabloids called him the Mad Bomber.
Metesky was a paranoid schizophrenic
and he had been injured in a furnace blast
and never really received proper workman's compensation.
This issue inflated into a kind of paranoid scenario in which he felt that he was being abused by the political and corporate powers.
It became a kind of grand crusade and it took on a sort of, in his mind, a kind of godlike quality or divine quality.
He wanted to wage a campaign that would get an enormous amount of tension and that would grip
New York City. And bombing, like any terrorism, was a very effective way to do it. And in fact,
all of the things that James Russell had predicted were more or less true.
And this changed law enforcement forever.
This peculiar genius really invented criminal profiling,
and then the FBI really turned it into a science.
Over the next 50 years, other serial bombers would have their moments.
There was Eric Rudolph, who planted the bomb at the 1996 Summer
Olympics, and then three more during five years on the run. And of course, there's the Unabomber,
Ted Kaczynski, who, like Miteski, kept at it for 16 years before he was caught.
But the Austin bomber had been active for only two weeks. The case was so fresh,
the evidence so scant, that studying history would only get you so far.
The Austin bomb squad was running ragged, chasing down suspicious packages.
People were scared, and every forgotten order dropped on the porch,
every stray box, every unfamiliar carton, became a threat.
But in a strange way, perhaps a psychologically self-protective way,
the bombings could be siloed, the danger compartmentalized.
Packages. That's the menace. That's what we avoid.
Because meanwhile, life goes on.
People go to work and school.
They go out to restaurants, bars, the gym.
A city of a million people doesn't shut down.
And all of this was happening, the bombings, the manhunt, the gym. A city of a million people doesn't shut down. And all of this was happening,
the bombings, the manhunt, the funerals, during the largest cultural and economic event of the year,
South by Southwest. I mean, I generally pay attention to this kind of thing because I live
here and I'm risk-averse and I like to be aware of my surroundings. This is Laurel White. She's the general manager
of Fair Market, an event space near downtown. On the last day of South By, Fair Market was
hosting a show with The Roots and Ludacris. Live Nation was responsible for essentially
subcontracting the company that brought in the stage and all the AV and lighting, and then there
were food and beverage vendors, and there were already people assembling outside. So there were many, many people involved and a lot of people on property when all of this
started happening. This would be the email that came into the ticket office. It read,
fuck you, I'm going to plant a bomb and watch everyone die. Then a second email, just one word, bomb. The threat came in through email, and then we
kind of had this little huddle up with Live Nation, and we said, you know, let's call 911
and report it and get instructions from there. And very quickly, an officer responded, and they
immediately started taking a report. And then shortly after that, a bomb squad was deployed.
While the Roots and Ludacris were doing their sound checks and the chattering crowd was
growing outside, Laurel guided the bomb techs through the building.
They came and they swept the venue.
They didn't find any evidence of a bomb.
Risk management is based primarily on data, facts.
What evidence is there of a specific threat
and what safeguards are in place to mitigate those threats?
But it's also an art.
So you swept the venue. It's clean.
You've invested thousands of man hours into this event
and there are many dollars at stake.
But how sure are you?
What's your comfort level with other people's lives? While all of that was happening, other
city officials started to respond. So it wasn't just APD. I mean, first of all, not their city
organization, but South by Southwest sent their top representatives over to the venue and to the
client to be present. And then the decision was made.
Bud Light, the show's sponsor, made the call to cancel.
The next day, Questlove, from the roots, sent out a tweet.
No one is more Mr. Show Must Go On than me,
but we can't risk our lives if we are told there was a bomb threat.
Thanks for understanding.
Police quickly arrested a 26-year-old Austin man named Trevor Weldon Ingram.
He'd sent both threats from his personal email address.
But he was almost as quickly ruled out as a suspect in the other bombings.
Turns out he'd been emailing threats to the employees at Austin's eBay branch for months.
He would eventually be sentenced to two years probation and $100 of community service.
Yet as the crowd dispersed from the canceled show and the final events were winding down that night,
the next stage in the serial bomber's dark odyssey would be triggered.
Austin, 911. I'm Indra Varma, and in the latest season of The Spy Who,
we open the file on Daphne Park, the spy who killed a prime minister.
As the Belgian Congo gains its independence,
Officer Park sets out to build a spy network.
Together, they're about to go to new extremes to keep Congo free of communists.
Follow The Spy Who now wherever you listen to podcasts.
From the award-winning creators of the hit podcast Father Wants Us Dead comes the stunning new true crime series In the Shadow of Princeton.
In 1989, a prominent woman was found stabbed to death in her Princeton home.
With no clear motive, it's a chilling mystery that vexed investigators for years.
Was the culprit a young outsider the police said was a serial attacker?
Or someone in her family?
Or even well-heeled students at the renowned Princeton University?
He had a ski mask in his possession and a knife.
She was familiar enough with them and trusted them enough that she turned her back on.
And that was her mistake.
One investigator sees a conspiracy.
Is he way off base?
Or does privilege help you get away with murder?
In the Shadow of Princeton is available wherever you get your podcasts.
Or you can binge it ad-free by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app, Apple Podcastth, 16 days after the first bomb.
Rob Nunez, the chief of the Austin Bomb Squad, has a break between shifts.
He's been chasing false alarms about suspicious packages for two weeks,
and there's no end in sight.
It was just like a blur of calls that entire week.
And I finally got a day to where I got to go for a run
through the neighborhood, and as I was running,
the lead ATF agent, Dan, was driving out.
He was going to work.
And so I flagged him down, hey, how's it going?
And it was to the point where I was a little frustrated. I'm like, hey, what in the hell
y'all got going on? Y'all got anything? And Dan, he just had this look. He's like, man,
nothing yet. You know, it's just this frustrated, down look on his face, you know, to where I can
see that they're trying.
So as I'm getting ready to go in for the night shift, we get another call.
Hey, there's been another explosion.
It's in this neighborhood called Travis Country.
Travis Country is just a couple of miles down the road from the neighborhood where me and Dan live.
While Rob rallied his team, Josh Oihus, one of the bomb techs,
was catching up on some much-needed sleep.
I'm already sleeping with one eye open as it is.
The pager goes off.
So I jump up.
I already have everything ready.
Run to the Suburban, jump in, and I put the hammer down.
That Suburban V8, that thing will go.
As I'm going, I'm like exhausted because we've been awake for days. I remember going through
the intersection, I think it was like 71 and 290 or something, and I'm like slapping myself
in the face. Like, wake up, someone is trying to kill you. So I get my stuff on, start rolling to the call, have my radio on,
and I start hearing information about what's going on on the scene.
And they start saying that there's a tripwire.
A tripwire.
Okay. My brain is like, this doesn't make any sense.
Like, literally, this is global war on terror stuff.
A tripwire bomb,
as the name suggests, is a bomb that is tripped or detonated by a wire that extends some distance from the bomb itself. They're more sophisticated than a fuse stuck into a pipe full of black powder,
and they require some planning to properly set. These are war zone bombs, the stuff of guerrillas,
insurgents, terrorists. Hide explosives in an abandoned car, in a roadside ditch, or in a dead dog in the median,
then attach the detonator to a long, thin filament that's almost impossible to see,
until it's too late.
They can be horrifically effective.
This tripwire bomb had been set at the entrance to a small public park
in a neighborhood of palatial homes on cul-de-sacs in southwest Austin. The wire had been strung across a sidewalk, and the bomb itself
had been covered by one of those signs that says, drive like your kids live here. But here's the
thing. None of those details, the neighborhood, the placement, the method, fit the pattern.
Here's Jeff Joseph. In the bomb tech world, tripwires are trained and
talked about ad nauseum, right? You beat over the head with tripwires and get numb to it,
but nobody ever seen a tripwire. And then, man, it's deployed. There had been a kid's birthday
party at a residence right there. That sidewalk goes to a park where kids go and play all day.
Kids are all over that neighborhood.
This bomb, the fourth to go off in 16 days, had been tripped by two college kids,
guys in their early 20s riding their bikes along the sidewalk by the park just after sunset.
I remember vividly like the fence next to
where the device went off was just like peppered. And in my mind, I was thinking like maybe he
upgraded the bomb size or he added something like he's adding nails or screws or something to this.
I would not have been wanting to stand there when I went off.
Miraculously, considering the size
and force of the explosion, both victims survived.
The device was low on the ground,
so it caused some pretty significant injuries
to the two guys, to their ankles and lower extremities.
When this device went off, like looking at the scene, right,
it was in an open area, and pieces and parts
of this device just went
everywhere. This was about 8 30 in the evening when this device went off. When we got there to the scene we made another immediate approach to the blast area. We could see a lot of the same
components. We knew that the placement and the targeting was a little bit different,
but we could determine that a lot of the components were the same.
We knew that the firing mechanism was the same as the other devices,
and a lot of the fragmentation that was placed on the device was the same.
So again, the same way we knew that the first three were related,
we could see that even though this placement was different,
it was all the same components.
So we knew that this was the same person.
The bombers' tactics were continuing to evolve, becoming more sophisticated.
The first three bombs were delivered to their targets.
The first detonated when it was picked up.
The next two, when they were opened.
But the fourth was
left out in the open, waiting to be set off by anyone who stumbled across a nearly invisible wire,
which meant just about anything could be another bomb. Sure, that package on your front stoop,
but also that backpack on a nearby patch of grass, that big rock beside the jogging path,
the neighbor's mailbox. Another component to our job is clearing the scene of any secondary
or any other explosive devices before that scene can be released to be processed.
We can run explosive canines.
They're really good at finding things by odor, but they don't care about tripwires.
Now we can take a robot and run a robot down the sidewalk.
We're either going to see it or we're going to run over it,
and it'll blow up the robot.
No harm, no foul, expensive robot, but at least no people got hurt.
But a robot can only clear the specific path that it rolls through.
So the only way to clear the wider area of any secondary devices was by sight.
And at this point, who's pitch black outside?
By the time we make the determination of the scene
where the tripwire is, is clear to start processing,
we're taking in the big picture of what's clear
and not clear of tripwires.
We don't know if the entire neighborhood is clear.
We know that there have been first responders
in and out of the scene.
So we have an idea that there's no tripwires right here,
but we don't know the entire neighborhood,
and then we don't know what's going on
in this Greenbelt area.
In Travis country, the location of this fourth bombing
is a sprawl of suburban homes, green spaces,
shaded trails, parks, and woods.
A lot of woods.
So from the administrative side or the chain of command side,
who's going to be the person in charge to say,
the green belt, no, we're not going to worry about that.
You know, it's just too big. Let's just look over here.
There's a certain level of risk that people aren't willing to take.
So are we going to go down all these trails and clear for tripwires?
Or are we going to walk all these sidewalks and clear for tripwires?
We're just not quite sure yet.
So they put out a reverse 911 call to the entire neighborhood
that we're just going to hold this entire scene until morning.
An entire neighborhood locked down until sunrise.
Austin truly is a city on edge this
morning as investigators have been waiting for daylight to begin the process of trying to find
evidence after a fourth explosion overnight. We were walking a trail with a dog looking for IEDs, basically.
We were walking and we were probably, I don't know, 100 yards.
We were far from the blast seat where the device had gone off.
And in the middle of the path was this like hunk of burned, twisted metal from the device going off.
And there's like trees and all kinds of stuff.
I was just like, how did this thing even make it this far?
Like if you shot a gun, a tree would have caught this,
caught the bullet, you know, way before this trail.
So we got that bagged up for evidence.
I knew from the construction of the devices,
I was thinking maybe in my mind,
it's somebody who's been trained. So I'm thinking this is like a veteran or an ISIS operative who's had training in,
you know, simple IED construction. Who knows?
So the fourth bomb really changed a number of things.
Chris Combs, the FBI special agent in charge.
You've changed again the complexity of the device.
This is completely random because it's a tripwire.
If a three-year-old kid walks down the sidewalk or a 56-year-old man, whoever walks down there is tripping this bomb.
So it's completely random.
And this raises the prospect of terrorism because, frankly, this is what we saw in Iraq and Afghanistan. You don't see tripwire bombs in this country. I couldn't tell you any other bomb that was a tripwire in this country It showed us the complexity is getting worse. You know,
I can remember a conversation I had with the Austin police chief where I was like,
are they going to try to put bombs on airplanes? Like, you know, we have really increased the
danger as to what is going on here. So that's a change. We still really have no leads,
to be quite honest with you. This, of course, was getting redundant. We have no leads.
Investigators had been saying that for more than two weeks,
and it was true.
They had pretty much nothing.
But to be clear, this was not for a lack of resources.
There were, at that time, more law enforcement officers
working the Austin bombing than any other case in the country,
possibly the world.
Nor was it for a lack of competence, of expertise. These
people were all very good at their jobs, and it certainly was not for a lack of effort. It's just
that some crimes are really hard to solve. This wasn't a TV caper. There was no screenwriter
plotting out the ending. This was an unknown perpetrator, or perpetrators, building bombs in
an unknown location, which were then detonated at four physically distant and seemingly unrelated locations.
The bomber or bombers left no fingerprints, no footprints, no tire tracks, no DNA.
And the most important thing they didn't leave,
the most important piece missing for the investigators, was a motive.
Most criminals do things for a reason.
And when you look at terrorism,
the idea of terrorism is you do something to get your cause out there. Like think about
airplane hijacking. They want to make a statement. Al-Qaeda, they make a statement. They take credit
for the bombings. Why do a bombing and not take credit for it? And that was one of the things we
didn't understand. Why are you doing these bombings? You're not taking credit for it. And that was one of the things we didn't understand. Why are you doing these bombings?
You're not taking credit for it.
You haven't released a manifesto.
You haven't said you want to save the world.
Usually, the vast, vast majority of the time,
people do things and then they tell you why they did it
because they want to get the attention.
You know, environmental terrorists attack
the headquarters of an oil company because
we want to stop big oil, right? So we did not understand. You have these four bombings,
nobody's claimed responsibility. There's no manifesto. Nobody knows why are you doing this,
right? Explain to us, because then that gets you to some leads. Is it an al-Qaeda ISIS cell?
Is it an environmental terrorist that at least
gives you a pot to go to to investigate? And right now, we have no idea. Between 1979 and 1989,
a dozen people from Dallas, Texas died mysteriously.
Why do you think it was so difficult to tie Terry to these deaths?
Because there's no smoking gun.
From Sony Music Entertainment,
this is Scary Terry.
Coming December 1st to The Binge.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts.
This week on This Is History in Conversation,
join me, Dan Jones, for an interview with the man, the myth, the legend, Stephen Fry.
We'll be talking about the impact of Greek myths on the Middle Ages
and get stuck into our favourite and least favourite heroes of legend.
Aeneas is a very annoying hero. The word that's always attached to him is pious.
Whatever the gods tell him to do, whatever a prophet tells him to do, he does it.
Search This Is History wherever you get your podcasts.
Over 17 days in March of 2018, four bombs exploded in the city of Austin.
Two people were dead, four wounded, and law enforcement had very little to work with. They didn't know who the bomber was, of course, but they also didn't know who he was bombing or why.
The first three bombs had suggested only the most basic of patterns.
All three had detonated in east side neighborhoods of black and brown people.
In other words, the bomber, or bombers, appeared to be targeting,
for whatever reason, racial minorities. But then the fourth bomb, the tripwire explosive,
was planted in a wealthy, mostly white neighborhood on the southwest side.
Jason Puckett covered the bombings for KVU-TV.
The tripwire bomb changed a lot.
I feel weird saying a bit of this as a white man,
but there was sort of an acknowledgement in Texas towns, period,
but in Austin specifically, that there was a little bit more crime on the east side.
It was perceived that way, at least.
We did some stories sort of actually tackling whether that was accurate or not.
But a lot of that goes way back.
You know, most Texas towns were segregated, where most of the minority population lived on the east side,
and that came from redlining. All of that leads me to saying, I think for a majority of Austin,
unfortunately, the bombs may not have felt as real as they did until they happened in that
southwest part of town. It was no longer the east side where a lot of people, I think,
sort of were even subconsciously going like, yeah, well, that's where crime happens.
I think what also really got people on that one was the fact that it was so random.
Suddenly, these were just two people who were walking down the street.
And that, I think, made it go from these may have been targeted in people's mind beforehand.
Why would I be targeted?
Now, suddenly, it's random indiscriminate attacks on people.
And I think it not only made
people more afraid, I think it made them step back and question everything they'd been told
up till that point. Remember, when the first bomb exploded, when it killed Anthony Stephan House,
the reflexive preliminary theories from law enforcement were that it was either a targeted
attack or that maybe House blew himself up when he was making a bomb.
We know neither of those is true.
Yet the bomber, consciously or not,
deliberately or not,
used stereotypes and prejudices
as a kind of criminal camouflage.
Here's University of Texas
Associate Professor of Psychology, Germaine Awad.
I think it's brilliant to have it in a neighborhood
where it would be questioned about what the motives were.
The assumption is, oh, well, if you have black and brown folks
in these neighborhoods, there has to be some criminal activity
that's responsible.
I mean, you don't know it's a pattern until a pattern occurs, right?
That tripwire gave them an out to not treat this like hate crime.
That's why I think this terrible Austin bomber was a genius in some ways.
He was hearing this narrative, he was paying attention to the media,
and he was like, oh yeah, you don't think I can switch this up?
The FBI didn't call the bombings hate crimes because they didn't know,
they couldn't know, the bomber's motive.
Assuming it was racial would have skewed the entire investigation.
If everyone is intent on finding a racist bomber, they might very well overlook clues to the equal opportunity bomber.
That said, the fact that the fourth bomb was not in a black or brown neighborhood didn't necessarily make the first three not hate crimes.
It simply made the profiling
by law enforcement more difficult, which could very well have been part of the bomber's plans.
So I do want to give law enforcement the benefit of the doubt in that way, but the assumption of
victims being criminals is not new in society, and Austin isn't any different. I mean, I love it when
people tell me, oh, Austin's a liberal city.
You know, Texas is really conservative,
but Austin is different.
No, racism is racism.
It's either hidden racism or overt racism.
And the rest of Texas may be more overt,
but Austin still has that covert liberal racism.
I think in the newsroom, we try to not lock into narratives when we don't have evidence. We had a lot of talks in the newsroom about whether or not the actual
bomber here was aware of the coverage. And that's a weird thing to keep in mind because you're
trying to inform a community, but you also are trying to be aware that the people who do this
sometimes get off to this. So how can we cover this in ways that's not giving them what they want out of this?
It's just a weird mental space.
It's chilling to know that the person responsible is watching it, being influenced by it.
The idea that the bomber was watching the media coverage,
which by this point was unavoidable for everyone,
was actually something law enforcement and FBI Special Agent Chris Combs thought maybe they could work with.
How can we address the bomber through one of the news conferences?
Because we were pretty sure he was watching.
Most people do.
You know, you always hear about the arsonist that stays at the scene and watches the fire.
You know, we were now 24-7 news, kind of captivated the nation.
We were positive that he was watching the news.
So it was the next morning that we developed a plan with the behavioral analysis of the FBI about talking to the bomber and trying to get him to communicate to us because we have no other option.
We have nothing else to really go on, unfortunately. So the next morning, there's a press conference actually at the site of the
fourth bombing where comments are very directed at the bomber saying, we don't know why you're
doing this. We would love to talk to you so we can try to understand why are you doing this?
What are you doing? Is there a cause? I will reach out to the suspect or suspects
and ask that you contact us, ask that you reach out to us, communicate with us so that we can put
this to an end. The overarching goal here is we need to stop the bombings, right? So we need to
save lives. And if I got to get on TV and talk to a bomber, which is a disgusting thought. And to speak to them professionally and emotionally,
that's a small price to pay if I can save, you know,
five children from hitting a tripwire bomb at a playground.
And I was more than willing to do it.
Frankly, I thought it would work.
I thought it would generate a phone call into the tip line to say,
hey, I'm the one that's doing it.
This is why I'm doing it.
Relying on the self-destructive narcissism of a serial bomber was a long shot,
and Combs and the rest of the cops knew it. This neighborhood is still being locked down
right now for safety, and we expect it to be so until approximately 2 p.m. today.
But at that point, they had little else to work with. And then, finally, someone who'd crossed paths with the bomber provided just the lead they needed.
We went and interviewed the guy that took the packages from the bomber.
The guy was obviously wearing a wig.
He had a hat really pulled down over his eyes.
He was wearing gloves.
So the guys ask him, hey, is there anything else you want to tell us? And he goes, well,
you want me to tell you about his car? And it was kind of like, what? Like, what did he just say?
Yeah, that's important. We would really like to talk about that. So now we got something.
That's next time on Witnessed, 19 days.
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This episode of Witnessed, 19 Days,
was reported and produced by Eli Kouros and Joshua Schaefer of Pegalo Pictures
and Alvin Cowan.
Executive produced by Josh Dean,
Vanessa Grigoriadis, Adam Hoff,
Ashley Ann Krigbaum, and Matthew Scher of Campside Media.
Hosted and co-produced by me, Sean Flynn.
Co-produced by Brian Haas and co-produced by David Leffler.
Written by Eli Khoras.
Edited and assembled by Nicholas Sinakis.
Original series theme by Kevin Ignatius of Das Tapes.
Interviews recorded by Nicholas Sinakis, Eli Kors, and Alvin Cowan.
Sound mix by Craig Plackey.
Production legal by Sean Fawcett of Raymond Legal PC.
And fair use legal by Sarah Burns and Diana Palacios of Davis Wright Tremaine.
If you'd like to donate to the Draylon Mason Fellows Program,
which helps young up-and-coming musicians in Austin,
you can do so by visiting austinsoundwaves.org.
Please rate and leave us a review if you like what you've heard,
and thanks again for listening.