Metro Nashville Police Chief
Anthony Quinn Warner as a person of interest in a Christmas Day bombing in downtown Nashville. Investigators have yet to determine a motive for the bombing, but it appears that Warner was acting as a lone wolf.
Authorities believe that Warner owned the RV which detonated outside of an AT&T transmission building around 6:30 a.m., injuring three people. Human tissue was found at the blast site and has been sent to a lab for DNA analysis. It is believed that Warner died in the explosion.
The FBI and several other law enforcement agencies spent most of the day on Saturday (December 26), searching a home in Antioch, Tennessee, which is believed to have been owned by Warner. Photographs on Google Earth show an RV similar to the one used in the bombing parked on the property.
The Straits Times
63-year-old who lived there recently named in news report; police chasing over 500 leads
Investigators at the house in Antioch, Tennessee, on Saturday, a day after the motor-home explosion in Nashville. Neighbours told local TV station WKRN that a recreational vehicle had been parked in the house s driveway for years but is now no longer there. PHOTO: REUTERS
PublishedDec 28, 2020, 5:00 am SGT
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Nashville bombing: Police name suspect, release CCTV footage showing huge blast engulfing street | Watch
Federal officials have identified a man believed to be behind the Christmas Day blast in Nashville in the US state of Tennessee and efforts are now on to ascertain the motive behind the explosion that severely damaged dozens of downtown buildings and injured three people.
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Nashville Police has released CCTV footage of Friday morning s explosion. (Photo: Video grab)
Federal officials have identified a man believed to be behind the
Christmas Day blast in Nashville in the US state of Tennessee and efforts are now on to ascertain the motive behind the explosion that severely damaged dozens of downtown buildings and injured three people.