Nashville Was Suicide Bombing Targeting 5G

According to Daily Mail

A 29-year-old mother who was given two homes worth $409,000 for free by the man identified as a person of interest in the Nashville Christmas Day bombing has said she had no knowledge of the property exchange, DailyMail.com can exclusively reveal.

Michelle Swing, who lives in Los Angeles, claims she was unaware Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, had signed the $160,000 Bakertown Road property raided on Saturday away to her last month via a quitclaim deed.

Swing’s signature does not appear on the November 25 transfer.

Swing declined to say whether she had ever met Warner or whether she had family links to him, adding: ‘I’ve been told to direct everything else to FBI.’

FBI agents swarmed the $160,000 property on Saturday morning in their hunt for the mystery RV driver behind the devastating blast outside Nashville’s AT&T building.

The Christmas morning explosion is now thought to have been the result of a suicide bombing after it was revealed that human remains had been recovered at the scene and officials said they were not looking for another suspect.

According to WSMV Nashville, the FBI are working on tips that Warner was paranoid about the idea that Americans are being spied on using 5G, which could explain why the RV exploded outside of an AT&T transmission center.

According to Newsweek, authorities will swab Warner’s mother to determine if he is a match to the remains found at the bomb site.

The second home that Warner had transferred to Swing was also located on Bakertown Road just a short walk from the house raided on Saturday.

The transfer took place in January 2019, just months after he had aquired the house in an intrafamily exchange.

The house originally belonged to Warner’s father Charles but was passed to Warner’s brother Steve after Charles’ death in 2011.

Steve also died of cancer in September 2018, a month after Warner acquired the house.

Tony Rodriguez lives in the second home within the duplex that agents raided on Saturday but told the Washington Post that he never spoke to his neighbor and did not know his name.

He alleged that Warner kept ‘No Trespassing’ signs around the home, especially around the RV, and was often seen tinkering with antenna above the house.

Rodriguez also claimed that investigators had taken a computer motherboard from Warner’s house during the search.

Another neighbor Steven Stone, 61, confirmed that he had seen a similar RV parked outside of Warner’s place.

‘When I looked out my window and saw all the law enforcement that’s when it hit me that I’d see the camper up there,’ he told USA Today.

Friday’s blast emanated from a white RV parked outside the AT&T building on 2nd Avenue at 6.40 am. The explosion injured three people and caused severe damage to the city’s downtown area.

Shocking new surveillance video of the explosion shows a police officer had just walked away from site when the bomb exploding, barely missing finding themselves in the line of fire for flying debris.

The event had led investigators on a frantic chase to determine who the vehicle belonged to.

On Saturday afternoon, a swarm of federal agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) were seen outside an address listed to Warner in the Nashville neighborhood of Antioch.

Neighbors reported seeing a white RV parked outside his property within the past two weeks. A similar vehicle can also been seen on a Google Street View search of Warner’s address from May 2019.

According to CBS, ‘at least two tips were called in to the FBI about Warner  prior to the explosion.’

During a press conference on Saturday afternoon, the FBI refused to identify any person in their investigation.

They say they are still pursuing approximately 500 leads and have close to 250 agents and analysts assigned to the case.

The Bureau is also investigating whether the blast was deliberately designed to target law enforcement officers.

Cops had been called to 2nd Avenue shortly before the explosion amid reports of a shooting. However, they arrived to find the white RV playing a recorded announcement saying that it would explode in 15 minutes.

One expert is now theorizing that the spooky recording was designed to bring as many cops and first responders as possible into the area with the intention of killing or maiming them.

‘I kind of think it was probably an idea to get first responders to come in,’ ex-NYPD Detective Bill Ryan told Fox News on Saturday.

Six cops have now been hailed as heroes after the descended on the area and tried to clear out pedestrians and residents before the bomb went off.

On Saturday, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee revealed that he has requested an emergency declaration from President Trump to support ongoing efforts and relief.

‘This morning I toured the site of the bombing. The damage is shocking and it is a miracle that no residents were killed. I continue to pray for those who sustained injuries from the blast,’ he wrote on Twitter.

It comes as Nashville police confirmed that they are investigating whether human remains have been found at the site of the bomb blast.

According to CNN, tissue was discovered at the scene, and forensic experts are now working to determine whether it is human.

It is unclear whether anybody was inside the RV at the time it detonated.

The gigantic blast caused damage to more than 40 buildings, with new videos showing the widespread impact it created.

One shocking clip shared on social media shows an apartment building violently shaking during the blast.

A resident told CNN on Saturday: I’ve never seen anything like it. It shook everything’

Meanwhile, other videos being shared widely on social media show people hiding for cover in buildings along 2nd Avenue as they were warned by cops that the RV could explode.

One man was walking his dog right by the RV and heard the warning message emanating from the vehicle.

Quick thinking cops quickly told him to get back just before the bomb went off. He told WKRN that it is a ‘Christmas miracle’ he is still alive.

Meanwhile, more information is being learned about the hero cops who tried to clear the area after they arrived to find the RV playing a recording saying it would explode.

They were named by Metro Police Chief John Drake as Officer Brenna Hosey, Officer James Luellen, Officer Michael Sipos, Officer Amanda Topping, Officer James Wells and Sergeant Timothy Miller, as he praised them for rushing into danger to save others.

The officers had been responding to reports of shots fired 40 minutes before the explosion when they found an RV located outside of an AT&T transmission building which was playing an announcement featuring a woman’s voice saying it would explode in 15 minutes.

There was no evidence of shooting at the scene and it is not known of the sounds could also have come from the RV’s recording. Cops have not revealed who made the initial shooting report.

They rushed to get people out of their homes while the ominous, pre-recorded message played over and over again with music playing inbetween each countdown, before the van eventually exploded at round 6.40am.

‘These officers didn’t care about themselves,’ Chief Drake said. ‘They didn’t think about that. They cared about the citizens of Nashville. They went in and we’d be talking not about the debris that we have here but potential people.’

Despite the devastation of the blast, miraculously only three people were injured.

They were rushed to hospital in non-life threatening conditions.

FBI Special Agent in charge Matt Foster made a plea to the public for information on Friday night.

‘The FBI stands with the city of Nashville today in this very tragic Christmas Day event.

‘This is our city too. We live here, we work here. We’re putting everything we have into finding who was responsible for what happened here today.

‘There are leads that need to be pursued and technical works need to happen.’

Anyone with information about the incident has been asked to contact the FBI at www.fbi.gov/nashville or by calling them.

On Friday night, star of CNBC’s The Profit Marcus Lemonis also offered a $250,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the culprit.

It brought the reward total to $300,000 after previous smaller reward offers from Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp., FOX Sports host Clay Travis, and Lewis Country Store.

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