A person was hospitalized after an overnight stabbing at a home on George Mason Avenue in Manor, police said. The call came in around midnight Sunday, March 22, prompting a multi-agency response that included Manor police, Travis County Emergency Services District 12, Austin-Travis County EMS and STAR Flight. The victim was transported from the scene to a local hospital for treatment, and officials said the incident appears to be isolated with no ongoing threat to the public.
Police said they have identified a suspect in connection with the stabbing, but had not released the person’s name or any additional information early Sunday, including whether an arrest had been made. Investigators also did not provide details about what led up to the stabbing or whether the victim and suspect knew each other.
No charges were announced in the initial police update, and authorities did not release the victim’s condition beyond confirming the person was taken to a hospital. Police said the investigation remained active as of early Sunday.
For residents seeking support in the aftermath of a violent incident, the Manor Police Department’s Victim Services Unit—established in 2017—offers crisis response, emotional support, safety planning, information about victims’ rights, referrals to community partners and guidance through the criminal-justice process, according to Manor’s victim-services overview. In its latest activity report, the department said the unit responded to 475 criminal-justice assistance cases and served 845 individuals, providing referrals, personal advocacy, emotional support, shelter or housing help and protective-order assistance.
Manor officials encouraged anyone with information related to the stabbing to contact the Manor Police Department through its non-emergency line. As a general public-safety note, FBI-compiled 2024 crime data summarized by CrimeByCity shows Manor’s violent- and property-crime rates were below national averages, with total reported crime down year over year; police emphasized Sunday that this incident does not appear to pose an ongoing risk to the broader community.