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Headline Homes: January 2021 | Nashville Post

Headline Homes: January 2021 | Nashville Post
nashvillepost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nashvillepost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Headline Homes: December 2020 | Nashville Post

Sale price: $6,825,000 Seller: Steven G. Cates Seller’s and Buyer’s agent: Steve Fridrich, Fridrich & Clark The buyer of this Belle Meade mansion hid behind an anonymous trust and we can’t really blame them. This is a heck of a purchase. The massive 9,300-square-footer sits on 1.2 acres, but who needs a yard when the house is equipped with five bedrooms, four bonus rooms, three fireplaces, two kitchens and an in-ground pool next to a spacious covered porch? It’s got geothermal heating and cooling, central vacuum and smart irrigation, cameras and lights, too. What else does it do, clean its own kitchen?

5G Paranoia May Have Been Motive in Nashville Bombing

Nashville blast suspect died in explosion, police say

Nashville blast suspect died in explosion, police say U.S. News Maria Caspani (Reuters) - The 63-year-old suspect in the bombing that rocked Nashville on Christmas morning was killed in the blast that destroyed his motor home and damaged more than 40 businesses, authorities said on Sunday. Nashville Metro Police Chief John Drake (L) and officers Amanda Topping, Michael Sipos, James Luellen, Brenna Hosey, and James Wells embrace after a news conference held to discuss the Christmas Day motor home explosion in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. December 27, 2020. Mark Zaleski/The Tennessean/USA TODAY NETWORK via REUTERS. Anthony Quinn Warner, who was named by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) as the suspect in the Christmas Day bombing in Nashville, appears in an undated Tennessee driver s license photograph released by the FBI December 28, 2020. FBI/Handout via REUTERS.

Nashville bomber left hints of trouble, motive elusive | News, Sports, Jobs

KIMBERLEE KRUESI, MICHAEL BALSAMO and MICHAEL KUNZELMAN Associated Press NASHVILLE, Tenn. In the days before he detonated a bomb in downtown Nashville on Christmas, Anthony Quinn Warner changed his life in ways that suggest he never intended to survive the blast that killed him and wounded three other people. Warner, 63, gave away his car, telling the recipient that he had cancer. A month before the bombing, he signed a document that transferred his longtime home in a Nashville suburb to a California woman for nothing in return. The computer consultant told an employer that he was retiring. But he didn’t leave behind a clear digital footprint or any other obvious clues to explain why he set off the explosion in his parked recreational vehicle or played a message warning people to flee before it damaged dozens of buildings and knocked out cellphone service in the area.

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