Images shows investigators sifting through the rubble from a downtown Nashville blast on Christmas Day
Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, the suspected bomber, is believed to have purchased chemicals with credit card
The Friday explosion came from a white RV parked outside the AT&T building on 2nd Avenue at 6.40 am
The explosion injured at least eight people and caused severe damage to the city s downtown area
On Monday Memphis FBI released a new photo of Warner where he appears to be leaning out of the white RV
Human remains found at the scene of the explosion match those of the man identified as the bomber
Nashville bomber was a cop-hating hippie with a Magnum PI mustache who loved weed when he was younger, says ex colleague - who claims he was popular with the ladies too
Tom Lundborg, who worked with Anthony Quinn Warner back in the 1970s, said the bomber harbored a hatred for the police more than four decades ago
Lundborg said they both worked for A.C.E. Alarms, Lundborg s dad s burglar alarm company, in Antioch, Tennessee
He said the then 20-something-year-old technician would lecture him that all cops were corrupt and couldn t be trusted
Lundborg, a teenager at the time, said he kind of looked up to [Warner] and described him as a smart, cocky kind of guy who was a hit with women
Updated: Dec 28 2020, 12:12 ET
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THE Nashville bomber hoped he would be hailed a hero for targeting an AT&T building because he believed 5G tech was killing people, it is claimed.
Police are also reportedly probing whether Anthony Quinn Warner s paranoia was fuelled by the death of his dementia-ridden dad - who worked for an AT&T subsidiary.
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The bomb blast on Christmas Day, which injured three people, happened near an AT&T facility
Warner, 63, who died at the site of the bomb blast, was heavily into conspiracy theories , a report says.
On Christmas Day, a bomb planted by the IT worker in a motor home exploded in downtown Nashville injuring three people and wrecking nearby buildings.
Anthony Warner, Nashville Bomber, Engaged in Flurry of Mystery Property Deals Before Attack
On 12/27/20 at 6:10 PM EST
The Nashville bombing suspect and his family engaged in a flurry of unexplained property transactions in the months and years before the blast that injured three people on Christmas Day.
A spokesperson for Nashville Police Chief John Drake on Sunday identified the suspect connected to the bomb detonated in downtown Nashville as Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, confirming
Newsweek s previous reporting. Authorities said Warner was present when the bomb went off and he perished in the bombing.
A law enforcement official familiar with the investigation told
Nashville hit by suicide bomber
Nashville Police Chief John Drake on Sunday identified the suicide bomber who detonated explosives in the Tennessee capital city’s downtown as Anthony Quinn Warner, a 63-year-old man described as a loner.
Anthony Quinn Warner
US Attorney Don Cochran also said, “Anthony Warner is the bomber, he was present when the bomb went off and he perished in the bombing.”
Law enforcement officials confirmed that investigators searched the suspect’s home at 115 Bakertown Road in Antioch, Tennessee, on Saturday after receiving a tip linking Warner to an RV matching an image released by authorities.
The Nashville bombing suspect engaged in a flurry of unexplained property transactions in the time before the blast that injured three people on Christmas Day.