Who Is The Austin Serial Bomber, Mark Anthony Conditt?
A driver of white box truck has been detained and charged by the local police in Tennessee after people complained of hearing a message similar to the one heard in downtown Nashville before the recreational vehicle exploded on Christmas Day.
On Sunday evening (local time), the Rutherford County Sheriff s Office informed the media that the truck was pulled over on Murfreesboro Road about a half-an-hour east from where the downtown Nashville RV explosion had taken place just two days before.
Residents in the nearby area were evacuated and the Highway 231 was blocked, while an explosive material detection robot thoroughly searched the vehicle. Thankfully, no explosives were found.
Man identified as Christmas Day bomber was longtime Nashville resident with electronics expertise Natalie Allison, Nashville Tennessean
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NASHVILLE, Tenn. Anthony Quinn Warner was the bomber in the explosion that rocked downtown Nashville on Christmas Day and he died in the blast, authorities said Sunday.
Warner, 63, was a longtime Nashvillian who held several IT jobs.
Public records show he had extensive experience with electronics and alarm systems. He worked as an independent computer technician with the real estate firm Fridrich & Clark.
Warner, who was previously named as a person of interest in the case by Nashville Police Chief John Drake, is believed to have acted alone in the incident, investigators said.
Published Monday, December 28, 2020
by Jason Schaumburg | The Center Square
(The Center Square) - Law enforcement officials said Sunday that Anthony Warner, 63, of Antioch, Tennessee, was likely responsible for the
Special Agent in Charge Doug Korneski of the FBI Memphis Field Office said DNA examinations of tissue samples recovered from the blast site were consistent with those of Warner. Law enforcement is now announcing that Anthony Warner, 63, of Bakertown Rd, is the man believed responsible for Friday s explosion, the Metro Nashville Police Department tweeted. He perished in the blast. No one else is presently believed to have been involved. Thank you to our federal & state partners.
Reuters Reuters
28 December, 2020, 7:12 pm
Investigators work near the site of an explosion on 2nd Avenue that occurred the day before in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. December 26, 2020. REUTERS/Harrison McClary
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Reuters) -Federal agents investigating the explosion of a motor home in Nashville were searching a two-story suburban house on Saturday for clues to the blast, which injured three people in the heart of America’s country music capital on Christmas Day.
Federal agents were also trying to identify apparent human remains found near the exploded vehicle.
The motor home, parked on a downtown street of Tennessee’s largest city, exploded at dawn on Friday moments after police responding to reports of gunfire noticed it and heard an automated message emanating from the vehicle warning of a bomb.
Submitted by BlueNC on
Mon, 12/28/2020 - 08:30
OVER 516,000 NC CITIZENS HAVE TESTED POSITIVE FOR CORONAVIRUS: At least 516,828 people in North Carolina have tested positive for the coronavirus and 6,549 have died, according to state health officials. On Saturday, the department reported 19,419 new COVID-19 cases over a three-day period. The department did not provide coronavirus data Thursday or Friday because of the Christmas holiday. About 11.9% of tests were reported positive as of Friday, the latest day for which data are available. On Sunday, 3,123 patients were hospitalized with COVID-19 in North Carolina. That’s 25 patients higher than the previous hospitalizations record of 3,098, which was reported three days earlier.