(CNN)Investigators continue to look at “any and all possible motives” in the Nashville explosion after identifying the bomber as Anthony Quinn Warner.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/28/us/nashville-bomb-christmas-monday/index.html

    In 2016, it lavished him with positive covers as he rose through the GOP primaries, culminating in an endorsement that April. Although the paper declined to endorse Trump or his opponent, Hillary Clinton, in the general election, the editorial board did back Trump over Biden this year, writing that another term would be “the best choice for the United States.”

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/12/28/nypost-trump-editorial-election/

    Zhang Zhan, a 37-year-old former lawyer and citizen journalist who was arrested in May while reporting from Wuhan, has been sentenced to four years in jail.

    Zhang was arrested for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble” – an accusation commonly used against dissidents, activists and journalists – with her video and blog reports from the Wuhan lockdown. Last month she was charged with disseminating false information.

    On Monday afternoon, just hours after the trial began, Zhang’s lawyer said she had been sentenced to four years in jail.

    The prosecution of 10 Hong Kongers detained in mainland China after allegedly attempting to flee to Taiwan also began Monday, amid a crackdown apparently timed with the Christmas period to avoid western scrutiny.

    The indictment sheet released last week said Zhang had sent “false information through text, video and other media through the internet media such as WeChat, Twitter and YouTube”.

    “She also accepted interviews from overseas media Free Radio Asia and Epoch Times and maliciously speculated on Wuhan’s Covid-19 epidemic,” it said. A sentence of four to five years was recommended.

    After the hearing, Zhang’s lawyer, Zhang Keke said Zhang appeared in court in a wheelchair, and that her mother burst into tears when the verdict was announced.

    Zhang has been restrained 24 hours-a-day, and force fed with a tube after she went on hunger strike, Zhang Keke said earlier this month. Zhang Keke visited again on Christmas day, and in a blog post said his client had lost 15 to 20kg and her hair had been cut short.

    “She feels psychologically exhausted, like every day is a torment.”

    Local media reported a heavy police presence outside the Shanghai Pudong courthouse on Monday, pushing journalists and observers away from the entrance as Zhang arrived. Foreign diplomats were reportedly among supporters at the scene.

    Zhang had denied the charges and said all her reports about the outbreak response were based on first-hand accounts from locals. Her video reports were often critical of the secrecy and censorship.

    “Ordinary people saying something casually in WeChat might be summoned and admonished,” she said in one report. “Because everything is undercover, this is the problem this country is facing now.”

    In others she accused authorities of violating basic rights of people, and called for the release of other citizen journalists who had been arrested for reporting from Wuhan.

    Among at least half a dozen citizen journalists targeted in Wuhan, Fang Bin, was arrested in February but his detention location remains secret. Chen Mei and Cai Wei are awaiting trial in Beijing after they were arrested in April for archiving censored information about the virus. Chen Qiushi, detained in Wuhan in February, was released to his parents’ home under close surveillance.

    Also on Monday, the trial began for 10 Hong Kongers who were detained after allegedly trying to reach Taiwan by boat in August. The group is charged with organising or participating in an illegal border crossing. Two other members are minors and will be tried at another date.

    The families said they were only told of the trial on Friday, too late to travel to Shenzhen and complete quarantine in time to attend. The trial isn’t being broadcast, and media appears unable to get inside the courtroom, turning it into a de facto secret trial, they said. Since their arrest the detainees had been almost entirely blocked from contact with families and barred from seeing chosen lawyers.

    “By holding the trial of the 12 in secret, barring the media and the families from attending, the Chinese authorities are disregarding basic human rights, acting against the ‘sunshine judiciary’ principle they have been promoting,” they said in a statement on Monday.

    RTHK reported from Shenzhen that court officials said the trial was open to the public but all seats had already been reserved. Chu Hoi-dick, a former Hong Kong legislator who has been helping the families, told RTHK it was expected all 10 defendants would plead guilty.

    Ahead of the trial the US state department called for the group’s release, with an official saying their only “so-called crime” was to “flee tyranny”.

    China’s notoriously opaque justice system has a conviction rate of about 99%, and often sees defendants denied full legal assistance. The last-minute trials of the Hong Kong 12 and Zhang came amid a flurry of activity by Chinese authorities, who have a history of using the holiday period, when many western governments and NGOs are on Christmas break, to run trials and make arrests.

    In December alone, authorities have arrested a Bloomberg journalist, Haze Fan, on unspecified national security allegations; human rights activist, Ou Biaofen, after he publicised the case of an activist sent to a psychiatric facility; and documentary journalist Du Bin. Ou and Du were both arrested for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble”.

    Authorities also reportedly delayed the trial of Australian writer Yang Henjun, charged with espionage and allegedly tortured during his two years in detention. On Sunday a court refused to hear an appeal against the four-year sentence for human rights lawyer Yu Wensheng, who publicly called for constitutional reforms including multi-candidate elections.

    “The slew of detentions of those who speak out will only further impede the flow of information about the situation in China,” Human Rights Watch researcher Yaqiu Wang said. “Governments around the world should press Beijing to release wrongfully detained journalists and activists immediately.”

    Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/dec/28/wuhan-citizen-journalist-jailed-for-four-years-in-chinas-christmas-crackdown

    ROCKFORD, Ill. (WIFR) – While the motive behind Saturday night’s mass shooting remains unknown, we are learning more about Duke Webb, the 37-year-old man who was taken into custody following the incident.

    Officials say Webb currently lives in Florida and is an active member of the U.S. Army. He joined the service in 2008 and he’s now a special forces assistant operations and intelligence sergeant. He’s assigned to the 3rd battalion at Camp Bull Simons Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.

    It is unclear what ties he has to the Rockford area at this time, but officials say Webb is currently on leave.

    Webb is expected to have his first appearance in court on Monday, December 28.

    Copyright 2020 WIFR. All rights reserved.

    Source Article from https://www.wifr.com/2020/12/28/who-is-duke-webb/

    There are still people waiting for all or part of their first Covid relief payment. Tax experts say it is not too late to request that cash.

    “They can get the stimulus payment they are eligible for in the form of a Recovery Rebate Credit when they file their 2020 taxes,” said Lisa Greene-Lewis, a certified public accountant and TurboTax expert.

    Those payments included up to $1,200 per individual or $2,400 per married couple, plus $500 per child under 17. The tax credit would either lower the amount of tax you need to pay, or increase the value of your tax refund.

    The easiest way for a taxpayer to get a stimulus payment, or additional payment — if they are, in fact, due more — is to apply on their 2020 tax return, explained Mark Steber, chief tax officer for Jackson Hewitt Tax Services.

    “There will be a schedule and line on the tax return to reconcile what they have received so far, and the amount actually due to them based on their 2020 tax return,” Steber said. 

    The IRS says that eligible individuals can claim the Recovery Rebate Credit on their 2020 Form 1040 or 1040-SR. These forms can also be used by people who are not normally required to file tax returns yet are eligible for the credit.

    For those concerned about how this might complicate the filing process this year, Greene-Lewis tells filers not to worry because automated tax preparation software will factor this in for you.

    “TurboTax has guidance related to stimulus payments and other impacts of Covid-19,” explained Greene-Lewis. “It will ask up front if the filer received a stimulus payment and then calculate the Recovery Rebate Credit based on actual 2020 income.”

    Whatever your circumstances, tax experts agree that filing early will be an especially good idea this year.

    SIGN UP: Money 101 is an 8-week learning course to financial freedom, delivered weekly to your inbox.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/27/trump-signs-covid-relief-bill-600-stimulus-checks-go-out-this-week-.html

    Story by Jill Colvin, Associated Press

    WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — President Donald Trump has signed a $900 billion pandemic relief package that will deliver long-sought cash to businesses and individuals. It also averts a government shutdown.

    Trump announced the signing in a statement Sunday night.

    The massive bill includes $1.4 trillion to fund government agencies through September and contains other end-of-session priorities such as money for cash-starved transit systems and an increase in food stamp benefits.

    Democrats are promising more aid to come once President-elect Joe Biden takes office, but Republicans are signaling a wait-and-see approach.

    The news came Sunday as millions lost unemployment aid, the government barreled toward a mid-pandemic shutdown and lawmakers implored President Donald Trump to act.

    Trump blindsided members of both parties and upended months of negotiations when he demanded last week that the package — already passed the House and Senate by large margins and believed to have Trump’s support — be revised to include larger relief checks and scaled-back spending.

    The federal government was slated to run out of money at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday while he spends the holidays golfing in Florida.

    Earlier Sunday evening, Trump offered the vaguest of updates, tweeting, “Good news on Covid Relief Bill. Information to follow!” The White House did not respond to questions about what he meant.

    In the face of growing economic hardship and spreading disease, lawmakers urged Trump on Sunday to sign the legislation immediately, then have Congress follow up with additional aid. Aside from unemployment benefits and relief payments to families, money for vaccine distribution, businesses, cash-starved public transit systems and more is on the line. Protections against evictions also hang in the balance.

    “What the president is doing right now is unbelievably cruel,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. “So many people are hurting. … It is really insane and this president has got to finally … do the right thing for the American people and stop worrying about his ego.”

    Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania said he understood that Trump “wants to be remembered for advocating for big checks, but the danger is he’ll be remembered for chaos and misery and erratic behavior if he allows this to expire.”

    Toomey added: “So I think the best thing to do, as I said, sign this and then make the case for subsequent legislation.”

    The same point was echoed by Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican who’s criticized Trump’s pandemic response and his efforts to undo the election results. “I just gave up guessing what he might do next,” he said.

    Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois said too much is at stake for Trump to “play this old switcheroo game.”

    “I don’t get the point,” he said. “I don’t understand what’s being done, why, unless it’s just to create chaos and show power and be upset because you lost the election.”

    Trump, who spent much of Sunday at his West Palm Beach golf course, has given no indication that he plans to sign the bill as he spends the last days of his presidency in a rage. Indeed, his dissatisfaction with the legislation seems only to have grown in recent days as he has criticized it both privately to club members and publicly on Twitter.

    Days ago, Democrats said they would call House lawmakers back to Washington for a vote Monday on Trump’s proposal to send out $2,000 relief checks, instead of the $600 approved by Congress. But the idea is likely to die in the Republican-controlled Senate, as it did among Republicans in the House during a rare Christmas Eve session. Democrats were also considering a vote Monday on a stopgap measure aimed at keeping the government running until President-elect Joe Biden is inaugurated Jan. 20.

    Washington has been reeling since Trump turned on the deal, without warning, after it had won sweeping approval in both houses of Congress and after the White House had assured Republican leaders that Trump would support it.

    Instead, he assailed the bill’s plan to provide $600 COVID-19 relief checks to most Americans — insisting it should be $2,000 — and took issue with spending included in an attached $1.4 trillion government funding bill to keep the federal government operating through September.

    And already, his opposition has had consequences, as two federal programs providing unemployment aid expired Saturday.

    Lauren Bauer of the Brookings Institution had calculated that at least 11 million people would lose aid immediately as a result of Trump’s failure to sign the legislation; millions more would exhaust other unemployment benefits within weeks.

    How and when people are affected by the lapse depends on the state they live in, the program they are relying on and when they applied for benefits.

    In some states, people on regular unemployment insurance will continue to receive payments under a program that extends benefits when the jobless rate surpassed a certain threshold, said Andrew Stettner, an unemployment insurance expert and senior fellow at the Century Foundation think tank.

    About 9.5 million people, however, had been relying on the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program that expired altogether Saturday. That program made unemployment insurance available to freelancers, gig workers and others normally not eligible. After receiving their last checks, those recipients will not be able to file for more aid, Stettner said.

    Fingers have been pointing at administration officials, including Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, as lawmakers try to understand whether they were misled about Trump’s position.

    “Now to be put in a lurch, after the president’s own person negotiated something that the president doesn’t want, it’s just — it’s surprising,” Kinzinger said. “But we will have to find a way out.”

    Kinzinger spoke on CNN’s “State of the Union,” and Hogan and Sanders on ABC’s “This Week.”

    ___

    Associated Press writer Alexandra Olson in New York contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.pennlive.com/news/2020/12/trump-signs-massive-funding-bill-averts-shutdown.html

    There are still people waiting for all or part of their first Covid relief payment. Tax experts say it is not too late to request that cash.

    “They can get the stimulus payment they are eligible for in the form of a Recovery Rebate Credit when they file their 2020 taxes,” said Lisa Greene-Lewis, a certified public accountant and TurboTax expert.

    Those payments included up to $1,200 per individual or $2,400 per married couple, plus $500 per child under 17. The tax credit would either lower the amount of tax you need to pay, or increase the value of your tax refund.

    The easiest way for a taxpayer to get a stimulus payment, or additional payment — if they are, in fact, due more — is to apply on their 2020 tax return, explained Mark Steber, chief tax officer for Jackson Hewitt Tax Services.

    “There will be a schedule and line on the tax return to reconcile what they have received so far, and the amount actually due to them based on their 2020 tax return,” Steber said. 

    The IRS says that eligible individuals can claim the Recovery Rebate Credit on their 2020 Form 1040 or 1040-SR. These forms can also be used by people who are not normally required to file tax returns yet are eligible for the credit.

    For those concerned about how this might complicate the filing process this year, Greene-Lewis tells filers not to worry because automated tax preparation software will factor this in for you.

    “TurboTax has guidance related to stimulus payments and other impacts of Covid-19,” explained Greene-Lewis. “It will ask up front if the filer received a stimulus payment and then calculate the Recovery Rebate Credit based on actual 2020 income.”

    Whatever your circumstances, tax experts agree that filing early will be an especially good idea this year.

    SIGN UP: Money 101 is an 8-week learning course to financial freedom, delivered weekly to your inbox.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/27/trump-signs-covid-relief-bill-600-stimulus-checks-go-out-this-week-.html

    NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The human remains at the Nashville bombing site have been confirmed to be those of Anthony Quinn Warner.

    Officials confirmed the discovery during a news conference Sunday afternoon.

    According to authorities, Warner acted alone.

    Warner was initially named as a person of interest Saturday, and multiple agencies raided a home in Antioch, a Nashville suburb.

    According to reports from our CBS affiliate NewsChannel 5, Warner was “present when the bomb went off and perished in the bombing.”

    Three people were injured, multiple buildings were damaged, and cell service was knocked out to much of the Southeastern United States following the explosion on Christmas Day.

    Source Article from https://whnt.com/news/human-remains-found-at-nashville-bombing-site-confirmed-to-be-of-suspect-anthony-quinn-warner/

    He provided a reporter with what appeared to be a packing slip and an email showing that the department of health had shipped 2,300 doses of the vaccine to ParCare.

    More than 850 had been administered, he said.

    “We are confident the end result of that review will show that ParCare at all times exerted best efforts to comply with all N.Y.S. D.O.H. requirements and will allow us to continue to achieve our number one goal of providing these critical vaccines to the New Yorkers who need them most,” the statement said.

    Advertisements for vaccines appeared on ParCare’s Twitter feed on Dec. 16, two days after the Pfizer vaccine was first administered in New York. The advertisement said that “the vaccines will be made available on a first come first serve basis,” and asked patients to register through a website or by scanning a QR code.

    The advertisement also said that the Food and Drug Administration authorized ParCare to administer the vaccine, but Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s administration is in charge of distributing the vaccine in the state. Some health clinics in the state have received the vaccine, but they are not yet supposed to administer it to people outside the prioritized groups.

    Members of the Orthodox Jewish community in Brooklyn have protested government restrictions on religious gatherings to reduce the spread of the virus, and footage from crowded Orthodox weddings and funerals has appeared on social media.

    Orthodox Jewish and Catholic institutions filed a lawsuit against Mr. Cuomo that ended with a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in November that the governor’s coronavirus restrictions on the size of religious services violated the First Amendment’s protection of freedom of religion.

    At the time Mr. Cuomo said the decision “doesn’t have any practical effect” because coronavirus cases had declined in many of the areas where the rules were in effect. Now that the rate of positive test results in New York are reaching levels not seen since the spring, the ruling may prove more relevant.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/27/nyregion/ny-clinic-coronavirus-vaccine.html

    The FBI has confirmed that Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, was the attacker who perished in the Nashville Christmas Day bombing, saying he died in an apparent suicide attack when an RV exploded outside of an AT&T building. 

    Local and federal officials said on Sunday that remains at the scene were a DNA match to Warner, an eccentric IT worker who lived outside of Nashville, and that he is believed to have acted alone in carrying out the attack.

    ‘We’re still following leads, but right now there is no indication that any other persons were involved,’ said Douglas Korneski, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Memphis field office. ‘We’ve reviewed hours of security video surrounding the recreation vehicle. We saw no other people involved.’ 

    Investigators refused to comment on a possible motive, following reports that Warner harbored deep paranoia about 5G  cell phone technology.  

    Nashville Mayor John Cooper on Sunday said he suspects that the AT&T transmission center was targeted in the attack, which wreaked havoc on phone systems in multiple Southern states on Christmas Day. 

    At an earlier press conference, police officers described how the RV, which was covered in cameras and loudspeakers, played an ominous warning about the impending explosion and as well as the classic soul hit ‘Downtown’ by Petula Clark just before the blast.    

    Nashville Chief of Police John Drake speaks at a news conference Sunday. The FBI has confirmed that Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, is the prime suspect in the Nashville Christmas Day bombing, saying DNA shows he died in an apparent suicide attack

    This image taken from surveillance video provided by Metro Nashville PD shows the RV that was involved in a blast on Friday. Loudspeakers on the vehicle played the soul hit ‘Downtown’ before it detonated

    Nashville Mayor John Cooper on Sunday said he suspects that the AT&T transmission center was targeted in the attack, which wreaked havoc on phone systems in multiple Southern states on Christmas Day 

    FBI and ATF agents investigate Warner’s home on Saturday. ‘No one else is presently believed to have been involved,’ the Metro Nashville Police Department said in a statement naming Warner as the prime suspect

    Cooper told CBS News’ Face the Nation that it ‘feels like there has to be some connection to the AT&T facility and the site of the bombing’.  

    Michelle Swing, a 29-year-old who lives in Los Angeles but previously lived in Tennessee, told DailyMail.com exclusively that she was unaware Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, had signed the $160,000 property away last month via a quitclaim deed

    WSMV Nashville said that the FBI was digging into claims that Warner was paranoid about the idea that Americans are being spied on using 5G, which could explain the location of the explosion on 2nd Avenue North. 

    One business owner on that street said he’d spotted a similar RV parked in the area multiple times in the past few weeks, suggesting that Warner may have ‘staked out’ the site of the attack. 

    Warner was a retired burglar alarm installer who continued to work as a freelance IT consultant. Neighbors described him as an eccentric loner who was often spotted tinkering with unusual antennas outside of his home in Antioch, a Nashville suburb. 

    FBI agents raided Warner’s home on Bakertown Road in Antioch on Saturday morning. Several neighbors described Warner as an ‘oddball’ and said they’d seen an RV parked outside the home which matched the one used in the attack.  

    DailyMail.com revealed that the $160,000 home had been transferred for free to 29-year-old Michelle Swing on November 25 – but she claims she was unaware of the exchange.     

    Media reports first identified Warner as a person of interest on Saturday as FBI agents raided his home, where a vehicle matching the one used in the bombing was seen parked in Google Street View images. 

    Daniel Douglas (above) talks about being neighbors with Anthony Quinn Warner outside his home in Nashville on Sunday. Those who knew him say Warner was an eccentric loner, often spotted tinkering with antennas places around his house

    Chilling video captured the moment the RV exploded outside Nashville’s AT&T building at about 6.40am Friday morning

    Smoke rises around the AT&T transmission center in downtown Nashville moments after the explosion on Friday morning

    Warner gave his $160,000 house away for nothing a month before the blast, DailyMail.com exclusively revealed. The property is pictured with a white RV identical to the one used in the bombing out front on Google Street View prior to the explosion 

    Investigators remove items from the basement of the home in Nashville, Tennessee, on Saturday afternoon

    The two properties are located just a 15 minute drive from the street in downtown Nashville where the bomb exploded

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

    Agents also spent time searching another location on Saturday, as well as Warner’s home, and spoke to a Nashville real estate agent who called in to say Warner used to work for him. 

    Steve Fridrich told WSMV that Warner was a subcontractor who had done IT work for him for years. He claimed agents asked him about whether Warner had spoken about 5G in the past but he said no.   

    ‘Nice guy. You know, he was a techie guy – don’t mean anything negative about that. He would do this thing and leave. He didn’t bother anybody. He did his thing and leave [sic],’ Fridrich said. 

    In a different interview with the Tennessean, Fridrich said Warner ‘seemed very personable to us – this is quite out of character I think’. 

    The Daily Beast reported that Warner was previously arrested in January 1978 and found guilty on an unspecified felony charge in 1980. 

    He has been described as an ‘oddball’ by neighbors, some of whom had reported seeing the RV used in the explosion parked outside of his home.  

    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 

    The FBI was said to have received two tips concerning Warner prior to the explosion, including one from a person who reported that he was making bombs in his RV in August 2019, The Sun reported.  

    Speaking to CBS News’ Face the Nation on Sunday, Nashville Mayor John Cooper said he suspects that the AT&T building was targeted in the attack

    ATF and law enforcement members investigate the Christmas Day explosion that tore through downtown Nashville

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

    Federal agents are seen on Saturday at Warner’s home on Bakertown road in Antioch 

    A man whose business was destroyed in Friday’s explosion came forward on Sunday to suggest that Warner had been ‘staking out’ the area. 

    Peter Gibson, owner of Pride and Glory Tattoo, said he’s seen an RV parked outside his parlor several times in the past few weeks. 

    ‘I can’t say if it was that one, but it was very similar,’ Gibson told WZTV.  

    ‘Whoever it was, they’d been staking out and they’d been doing their laps and their routine, practicing for a couple of weeks, it seems.’  

    What we know about Anthony Quinn Warner 

    Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, was named by local media as the person of interest in the Nashville Christmas Day bombing. Unmarried and childless, Warner is listed as a Nashville resident who lived in the suburb Antioch.

    A property linked to him since the 1980s was raided on Bakertown Road, Antioch on Saturday afternoon. This house was transferred for free to 29-year-old Michelle Swing on November 25 but she claims she was unaware of the exchange. 

    Warner had also transferred a $249,000 house on the same road to Swing for free in January 2019.  

    That house previously belonged to Warner’s father Charles, who died in 2011. It was transferred to Warner’s brother Steve before being passed to Warner in October 2018, a month prior to Steve’s death.  

    Warner’s mother Chris is still alive and he has a sister Teresa. 

    The Daily Beast reported Warner was arrested in 1978 and convicted of an unspecified felony charge in 1980.

    Neighbors described Warner as an ‘oddball’ who was seen tinkering with antenna on his roof and placed ‘No Trepassing’ signs around his house.

    FBI agents are said to be investigating tips that Warner was paranoid about spying on Americans through 5G. 

    He used the Bakertown Road address as the location of his business, Custom Alarms Electronics, which specialized in burglar alarms. The license for the business expired in 1998.  

    Warner then became a self-employed IT worker and carried out subcontract work for a local real-estate agent who spoke to FBI agents on Saturday. 

    Adding to the mystery over Warner were the revelations that he had transferred his Antioch home to Swing late last month via a quitclaim deed. 

    Swing, who lives in Los Angeles, said she was unaware of the transfer and her signature does not appear on the deed dated November 25.  

    ‘In the state of Tennessee you can deed property to someone else without their consent or their signature or anything,’ Swing explained to DailyMail.com on Saturday.

    ‘I didn’t even buy the house he just deeded it over to me without my knowledge. 

    ‘This all very weird to me, that’s about all I can say.’

    She 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.’ 

    However, Warner reportedly informed Swing of the home transfer in a letter, which she handed over to the FBI. 

    In the letter Warner said that he ‘intended to travel on Christmas Eve to spend a few weeks in the woods with his dogs’, the Sun reported.

    He also offered a few details about his property before concluding with a bizarre line: ‘The attic has plywood and lighting, take a look. The basement is not normal, take a look. Woof woof Julio.’

    Records show Warner also transferred another home on Bakertown Road to Swing via a quitclaim deed in January 2019. 

    The $249,000 house had previously belonged to a member of his family and Warner had only been in possession of it for five months before again giving it to Swing for free. She later also used a quitclaim to give the house to another person.    

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

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

    Court records show Warner’s mother Chris tried to stop the transfer of the second home last year after accusing her son of acting in his own interest as Steve’s power-of-attorney before his death, according to the Tennessean. Chris later dropped the case against her son.  

    Swing’s address in the record for the transfer is listed as Lenoir City, Tennessee, a two-hour drive from Nashville. 

    In March 2019, she also used a quitclaim to give away the house to a person named Betty Lane, according to county records

    According to her LinkedIn profile, she studied Marketing and Business and the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, where she remained working until 2012 when she moved to California. 

    Swing first lived in San Francisco before a move to Los Angeles in October 2018, where she works in artist development for Anschutz Entertainment Group.  

    Swing, 29, was given two homes by Warner but their link is unknown. She now lives in California

    Swing has claimed that she had no idea that the house had been transferred to her at no cost on November 25

    Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, signed the property away via a quitclaim deed to Michelle Swing, a 29-year-old woman living in Los Angeles, for $0.00, according to county records pictured above. Swing’s signature does not appear on the November 25th transfer and she told DailyMail.com she knew absolutely nothing about it

    According to records, in January 2019, Warner also transferred this $249,000 home to Swing

    Petula Clark’s ‘Downtown’

     [Verse 1] – When you’re alone and life is making you lonely; You can always go downtown; When you’ve got worries, all the noise and the hurry; Seems to help, I know, downtown

    [Pre-Chorus] – Just listen to the music of the traffic in the city; Linger on the sidewalk where the neon signs are pretty; How can you lose? The lights are much brighter there; You can forget all your troubles, forget all your cares

    [Chorus] – So go downtown; Things will be great when you’re downtown; No finer place for sure, downtown;  Everything’s waiting for you

    [Verse 2] – Don’t hang around and let your problems surround you; There are movie shows downtown; Maybe you know some little places to go to; Where they never close downtown

    [Pre-Chorus] – Just listen to the rhythm of a gentle bossa nova; You’ll be dancing with ’em too before the night is over; Happy again; The lights are much brighter there;  You can forget all your troubles, forget all your cares

    [Chorus] – So go downtown; Where all the lights are bright, downtown; Waiting for you tonight, downtown;  You’re gonna be alright now, downtown

    [Instrumental Break w/ Backing Vocals]

    [Pre-Chorus] – And you may find somebody kind to help and understand you; Someone who is just like you and needs a gentle hand to; Guide them along; So maybe I’ll see you there; We can forget all our troubles, forget all our cares

    [Chorus] – So go downtown; Things will be great when you’re downtown; Don’t wait a minute more, downtown;  Everything is waiting for you, downtown

    [Outro] – Downtown (downtown); Downtown (downtown); Downtown (downtown); Downtown (downtown)

    Petula Clark is pictured in March 2020

    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. 

    Cops had been called to the area around 6am following reports of shots fired. 

    They arrived to find no evidence of a shooting but instead encountered the RV, which was playing a recording of a woman’s voice warning that it would explode in 15 minutes. 

    Six responding officers who rushed to evacuate the area have been hailed as heroes for their quick efforts in the face of grave danger. 

    They are: Officers Brenna Hosey, James Luellen, Michael Sipos, Amanda Topping, James Wells and Sergeant Timothy Miller. 

    Five of the officers described their version of events at a press conference on Sunday morning, revealing that the RV played the song Downtown by Petula Clark before it detonated.  

    Luellen said he arrived at the scene first and scoped out the building where gunshots were reported, finding no evidence of gunfire. 

    Hosey arrived soon after, at which point both officers heard the recording coming from the vehicle.  

    ‘There’s a large bomb within this vehicle, your primary objective is to evacuate,’ Luellen quoted a woman’s voice as saying.  

    ‘I looked at Officer Hosey just to verify we heard the same thing, and then it started over,’ he said. 

    Luellen said he reported the audio to his supervisor, Sgt Miller, who ordered the deployment of all available units and instructed officers to evacuate the area. 

    Minutes later the RV started playing a three-minute countdown, followed by ‘Downtown’, Luellen said. He said all the shades were down on the vehicle, which didn’t have a tag.  

    Then came the explosion, which knocked Luellen to the ground and activated an airbag in another officer’s vehicle. 

    Officer Wells described hearing a ‘voice from God’ which told him to check on his partner Topping seconds before the blast went off, throwing him backward. 

    Topping said she sprinted to Wells and the pair ran for cover in a doorway. 

    ‘I’ve never grabbed somebody so hard in my life,’ Topping said, her voice shaking with emotion. 

    Wells said that EMTs tried to take him to the hospital for examination, but he convinced them to let him go and focus their efforts on the three reported injuries. 

    Each of the officers described how they called loved ones to assure that they were okay before news of the explosion reached the media.  

     

    Six officers who responded to the scene moments before the explosion have been hailed as heroes for their efforts to evacuate the area. Pictured (clockwise from top left): Officer Amanda Topping, Officer Michael Sipos, Officer Richard Luellen, Officer James Wells, Sergeant Timothy Miller and Officer Brenna Hosey

    At a press conference on Sunday Officer Richard Luellen described his efforts to evacuate the area on Friday

    Officers Amanda Topping (left) and James Wells (right) talked about running for cover together when the bomb went off

    Investigators immediately launched a frantic chase for the person who left the RV on the street. On Saturday officials said they were pursuing approximately 500 leads and had close to 250 agents and analysts assigned to the case.   

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

    One expert theorized 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.    

    Nashville police confirmed on Saturday that they were investigating possible human remains at the site of the blast.  

    Emergency personnel work near the scene of an explosion in downtown Nashville on Friday

    An aerial view of the scene in downtown Nashville on Friday morning after an ‘intentional’ explosion came from a parked car

    This is what is left of Second Avenue in downtown Nashville after the explosion on Friday morning. Police have not yet identified a suspect 

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

    ‘I’ve never seen anything like it. It shook everything,’ a resident told CNN. 

    David Malloy said he was walking his dog right by the RV and heard the warning message emanating from the vehicle. 

    Cops told Malloy to get back just before the bomb went off. He told WKRN that it is a ‘Christmas miracle’ he is still alive. 

    Gibson, the tattoo parlor owner whose shop was destroyed in the blast, told WZTV he is ‘heartbroken, speechless and pissed’.   

    ‘I try to have a big heart, and I try to be a big person … [but] that person’s gonna get what they have coming, for sure,’ he said of the attacker. 

    David Malloy was walking his dog right by the RV and heard the warning message emanating from the vehicle. He is seen in a lobby on the city’s downtown area just before the blast

    Malloy told WKRN that it is a ‘Christmas miracle’ he is still alive

    Tennessee Governor Bill Lee announced on Saturday that that he has requested an emergency declaration from President Donald 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.  

    On Saturday morning, the Federal Aviation Administration  classified the airspace over the site of the bombing as ‘National Defense Airspace’. 

    The order prohibits pilots from flying over the site and a surrounding area of one nautical mile. The restriction will stay in place until December 30. 

    Meanwhile, the area on the ground has still been cordoned off and there is a strong police presence.

    Nashville Mayor Cooper said it will be ‘some time’ before 2nd Avenue is open as normal. 

    On Friday evening, he  announced curfew on the area around the bomb site as the investigation continued. 

    ‘A curfew will start at 4:30pm, Friday Dec 25. and be lifted Sunday, December 27 at 4:30pm,’ Cooper tweeted.   

    Because the RV was parked outside an AT&T facility, the explosion caused widespread network outages to the company’s phone and internet services in Tennessee and Kentucky. 

    That issue sparked safety fears as 911 dispatchers were reportedly having trouble identifying the location of callers.   

    This was the scene immediately after the explosion on Friday morning in downtown Nashville

    A vehicle burns near the site of an explosion in the area of Second and Commerce in Nashville on Friday

    Nashville Mayor John Cooper says it will be ‘some time’ before 2nd Avenue and the surround downtown area is open as normal

    A law enforcement member walks past damage from an explosion in downtown Nashville

    The scale of the debris was enormous. All of 2nd Avenue between The entire street on second avenue was covered with it

    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,’ Foster said.

    ‘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.  

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

    His offer 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.   

    Neighbors reported seeing a white RV parked in Warner’s driveway. Agents are seen at the $160,000 home

    A member of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) is seen outside the home

    Law enforcement officers gather to investigate the house which was scanned for further bombs

    ATF police were seen searching the house and removing evidence from the basement

    Neighbors watch on as investigators search the home allegedly linked to the bombing suspect

    A member of law enforcement returns to his vehicle as the search on the home continues

    Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9091379/DNA-confirms-Nashville-bomber-Anthony-Warner-lone-wolf-died-Christmas-Day-explosion.html

    Show More

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2020/12/27/trump-stimulus-shutdown-congress/

    A holiday surge in coronavirus cases may result in extended stay-at-home orders for Southern California and other areas.

    The earliest date that Southern California could have become eligible to exit the existing order was Monday, but state officials said Sunday that the region and several other areas of the state would likely have to continue following the restrictions for several more weeks as the recent surge is pushing hospitals to the breaking point.

    The restrictions include reduced capacity at retail stores; the closure of some businesses including hair salons, nail salons, card rooms, museums, zoos and aquariums; and a prohibition on most gatherings, hotel stays for tourism and outdoor restaurant dining.

    Last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom expressed doubt that the Southern California and San Joaquin Valley regions would emerge from the state order by Monday due to a steady erosion of intensive care unit beds for COVID-19 patients.

    Stay-at-home orders will remain in effect until the region’s projected ICU capacity is equal to or greater than 15%, according to state guidance. In the Southern California and San Joaquin Valley regions — which combined cover 23 of California’s 58 counties — the current available ICU capacity stands at 0%.

    That doesn’t mean there are no unoccupied ICU beds at all, as the state uses a weighted formula to ensure that some remain open for patients who don’t have COVID-19. But officials and experts warn that an overcrowded ICU can overburden doctors and nurses, imperiling the quality of care for everyone, including COVID-19 patients, heart attack victims and those who were seriously injured in a car accident.

    “It is likely that the Regional Stay at Home Order will extend for many regions in California,” the California Department of Public Health said in a statement Sunday. Once a county reaches the ICU threshold of 15% capacity or greater, it must maintain that status for four weeks.

    The agency reported that the state has 2,122,806 confirmed cases to date, with over 24,000 deaths. There were more than 50,000 newly recorded confirmed cases on Saturday.

    On Saturday, Los Angeles County health officials reported 29,423 new coronavirus cases over Christmas Day and Saturday combined. Friday’s numbers — 15,538 cases — were delayed because of an interruption with Spectrum internet service in the L.A. area.

    Local health agencies also reported 136 deaths over the two-day period. The county averaged about 14,000 new coronavirus cases a day and 88 COVID-19 deaths daily over the past week.

    Hospitals throughout the county are overwhelmed. Some are running dangerously low on their supplies of oxygen, critical to treating severely ill COVID-19 patients who have begun to suffocate on account of their virus-inflamed lungs. Emergency rooms are so overcrowded that ambulances have to wait as long as eight hours to drop off patients or are sometimes sent to hospitals farther away.

    Under one scenario, experts predict there could be a boost in new coronavirus cases by mid-January, a surge in hospitalizations by late January and early February, and another burst of deaths by early to mid-February.

    The quick succession of holidays in the fall and winter months typically allows people to celebrate and spend time with loved ones in a brief period.

    But that leaves little time for coronavirus cases to start falling before they spike again, creating surges on top of surges.

    Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, a medical epidemiologist and infectious disease expert at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, said a person who is exposed to COVID-19 at a Christmas gathering could be infectious by New Year’s Eve.

    However, the individual may be asymptomatic, go to a New Year’s Eve party and unknowingly spread the disease, he said.

    Coupled with a high infection rate — about 1 in 95 in Los Angeles County are contagious with the virus, according to county estimates — the holidays are creating a “viral wildfire,” he said.

    Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-12-27/southern-california-will-likely-face-extended-stay-at-home-order

    Police in Rutherford and Wilson counties in Tennessee are investigating a white box truck parked outside of a local convenience store playing audio “similar to what was heard before the Christmas Day explosion in Nashville.”

    NASHVILLE BOMBING SUSPECT IDENTIFIED AS ANTHONY QUINN WARNER, 63 POLICE SOURCES SAY

    According to a statement by the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office, dispatchers received a call at about 10:30 a.m. regarding the truck, which was parked at Crossroads Market in Walter Hill.

    Police said deputies located the truck, which had traveled from Rutherford County into Wilson County, and proceeded to make a traffic stop. The driver was then detained by police. 

    Nashville RV played 60’s hit song ‘Downtown’ by Petula Clark before detonating: police

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Wilson County police have closed Highway 231 South from the Cedars of Lebanon State Park to Richmond Shop road due to the suspicious vehicle.

    As a precaution, nearby residents have also been evacuated from the active scene. An investigation by the sheriff’s office and the Tennessee Highway Patrol is currently underway. 

    Police ask that residents avoid the area and seek alternate routes. 

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/white-box-truck-playing-audio-similar-to-rv-in-nashville-explosion-shuts-down-tennessee-highway

    Without singling them out by name, Kinzinger claimed these colleagues of his have an ulterior motive: raising money.

    “It is a scam and it is going to disappoint the people that believe this election was stolen, that think this is an opportunity to change it,” Kinzinger said.

    Based on the states he won, Biden will have 306 electoral votes, compared with 232 for Trump.

    Kinzinger told host Dana Bash: “We talk about the Constitution, and we have to follow it and I’m sorry if that doesn’t mean the outcome was what you wanted.”

    He said he was concerned where this might all lead.

    “If you convince people that, you know, Congress can change a legitimate election and everything was stolen, there is a deep state/theory driving this that Satan runs the government. You can see people driven to violence so I’m concerned about that,” Kinzinger said.

    Brooks, who has been vocal in claiming the election was stolen from Trump, later responded to Kinzinger’s comments by tweet: “AK says many citizens will be disappointed. YEP – BECAUSE SO MANY POLITICIANS SURRENDER TO VOTER FRAUD!”

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/27/kinzinger-trump-election-defeat-republicans-450826

    Nashville man Anthony Quinn Warner is the person of interest investigators have linked with the Christmas day explosion in downtown Nashville, police chief John Drake confirmed Sunday.

    Warner, 63, is a longtime Nashvillian who held several IT jobs throughout his life. Federal authorities are scouring the city for evidence on Warner.

    Public records show he had extensive experience with electronics and alarm systems. He recently worked as an independent computer technician with the real estate firm Fridrich & Clark.

    Federal agents searched his Antioch home and the Fridrich & Clark real estate office in Nashville Saturday. Google Street View images of Warner’s home show a white RV parked behind a wooden fence on the property.

    A similar RV was at the center of the Friday morning blast on Second Avenue in  downtown Nashville. His neighbors reported seeing the RV at the home for years. 

    Police said the explosion came from the RV soon after a speaker system broadcast an urgent warning to evacuate the area. Authorities have not identified whose human tissue was found Friday at the blast site, Darrell DeBusk, a public affairs office for the FBI, said Sunday afternoon. He could not provide a time estimate on when the results would be available.

    Source Article from https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/crime/2020/12/27/anthony-quinn-warner-confirmed-person-interest-nashville-explosion/4052711001/

    Without singling them out by name, Kinzinger claimed these colleagues of his have an ulterior motive: raising money.

    “It is a scam and it is going to disappoint the people that believe this election was stolen, that think this is an opportunity to change it,” Kinzinger said.

    Based on the states he won, Biden will have 306 electoral votes, compared with 232 for Trump.

    Kinzinger told host Dana Bash: “We talk about the Constitution, and we have to follow it and I’m sorry if that doesn’t mean the outcome was what you wanted.”

    He said he was concerned where this might all lead.

    “If you convince people that, you know, Congress can change a legitimate election and everything was stolen, there is a deep state/theory driving this that Satan runs the government. You can see people driven to violence so I’m concerned about that,” Kinzinger said.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/27/kinzinger-trump-election-defeat-republicans-450826

    Speculation is growing that the AT&T building was intentionally targeted in the Nashville Christmas Day bombing as the FBI probes rumors that the main suspect in the attack harbored deep paranoia about 5G technology.  

    Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, was named in local media as the FBI’s sole person of interest hours after an RV exploded outside Nashville’s AT&T building on Friday morning, leaving three people injured and multiple structures damaged. 

    At a press conference on Sunday police described how the RV, which was covered in cameras, played an ominous warning about the impending explosion and the song ‘Downtown’ by Petula Clark in the minutes before the blast went off.  

    The explosion is 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. 

    Nashville Mayor John Cooper on Sunday said he suspects that the AT&T transmission center was targeted in the attack. 

    Cooper told CBS News’ Face the Nation that it ‘feels like there has to be some connection to the AT&T facility and the site of the bombing’.  

    Law enforcement sources told CBS that Warner is believed to have died in the explosion as DNA tests are performed on the remains. The outlet reported that the FBI received at least two tips about Warner prior to the blast.  

    WSMV Nashville said that the FBI was digging into claims that Warner was paranoid about the idea that Americans are being spied on using 5G, which could explain the location of the explosion.   

    FBI agents raided Warner’s home on Bakerstown Road in Antioch on Saturday morning. Several neighbors described Warner as an ‘oddball’ and said they’d seen an RV parked outside the home which matched the one used in the attack.  

    DailyMail.com revealed that the $160,000 home had been transferred for free to 29-year-old Michelle Swing on November 25 – but she claims she was unaware of the exchange.    

    Scroll down for video 

    Speculation is growing that the AT&T building was intentionally targeted in the Nashville Christmas Day bombing as the FBI probes rumors that the main suspect in the attack, identified by media as Anthony Quinn Warner, harbored deep paranoia about 5G technology. Pictured: Investigators dig through the wreckage on 2nd Avenue North 

    Chilling video captured the moment the RV exploded outside Nashville’s AT&T building at about 6.30am Friday morning

    Speaking to CBS News’ Face the Nation on Sunday, Nashville Mayor John Cooper said he suspects that the AT&T building was targeted in the attack

    Smoke rises around the AT&T transmission center in downtown Nashville moments after the explosion on Friday morning

    Warner gave his $160,000 house away for nothing a month before the blast, DailyMail.com exclusively revealed. The property is pictured with a white RV used in the bombing out front on Google Street View prior to the explosion 

    The two properties are located just a 15 minute drive from the street in downtown Nashville where the bomb exploded

    Investigators remove items from the basement of the home in Nashville, Tennessee, on Saturday afternoon

    Michelle Swing, a 29-year-old who lives in Los Angeles but previously lived in Tennessee, told DailyMail.com exclusively that she was unaware Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, had signed the $160,000 property away last month via a quitclaim deed

    Officials on Saturday did not identify a suspect as the raid on the home began but unmarried Warner has been named in media reports and a vehicle matching the one used in the bombing is seen parked up beside the two-bed house in Google street view images.

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

    Agents also spent time searching another location on Saturday, as well as Warner’s home, and spoke to a Nashville real estate agent who called in to say Warner used to work for him. 

    Steve Fridrich told WSMV that Warner was a subcontractor who had done IT work for him for years. He claimed agents asked him about whether Warner had spoken about 5G in the past but he said no.   

    ‘Nice guy. You know, he was a techie guy – don’t mean anything negative about that. He would do this thing and leave. He didn’t bother anybody. He did his thing and leave [sic],’ Fridrich said. 

    The Daily Beast reported that Warner was previously arrested in January 1978 and found guilty on an unspecified felony charge in 1980. 

    He has been described as an ‘oddball’ by neighbors, some of whom had reported seeing the RV used in the explosion parked outside of his home.  

    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 

    The RV which exploded on Christmas morning is pictured. Police are now purportedly investigating whether it belonged to Anthony Quinn Warner

    ATF and law enforcement members investigate the Christmas Day explosion that tore through downtown Nashville

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

    Federal agents are seen on Saturday at Warner’s home on Bakertown road in Antioch 

    What we know about Anthony Quinn Warner 

    Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, was named by local media as the person of interest in the Nashville Christmas Day bombing. Unmarried and childless, Warner is listed as a Nashville resident who lived in the suburb Antioch.

    A property linked to him since the 1980s was raided on Bakertown Road, Antioch on Saturday afternoon. This house was transferred for free to 29-year-old Michelle Swing on November 25 but she claims she was unaware of the exchange. 

    Warner had also transferred a $249,000 house on the same road to Swing for free in January 2019.  

    That house previously belonged to Warner’s father Charles, who died in 2011. It was transferred to Warner’s brother Steve before being passed to Warner in October 2018, a month prior to Steve’s death.  

    Warner’s mother Chris is still alive and he has a sister Teresa. 

    The Daily Beast reported Warner was arrested in 1978 and convicted of an unspecified felony charge in 1980.

    Neighbors described Warner as an ‘oddball’ who was seen tinkering with antenna on his roof and placed ‘No Trepassing’ signs around his house.

    FBI agents are said to be investigating tips that Warner was paranoid about spying on Americans through 5G. 

    He used the Bakertown Road address as the location of his business, Custom Alarms Electronics, which specialized in burglar alarms. The license for the business expired in 1998.  

    Warner then became a self-employed IT worker and carried out subcontract work for a local real-estate agent who spoke to FBI agents on Saturday. 

    Adding to the mystery over Warner were the revelations that he had transferred his Antioch home to Swing late last month via a quitclaim deed.  

    Swing, who lives in Los Angeles, said she was unaware of the transfer and her signature does not appear on the deed dated November 25.  

    ‘In the state of Tennessee you can deed property to someone else without their consent or their signature or anything,’ Swing explained to DailyMail.com on Saturday.

    ‘I didn’t even buy the house he just deeded it over to me without my knowledge. 

    ‘This all very weird to me, that’s about all I can say.’

    She 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.’ 

    Records show Warner also transferred another home on Bakertown Road to Swing via a quitclaim deed in January 2019. 

    The $249,000 house had previously belonged to a member of his family and Warner had only been in possession of it for five months before again giving it to Swing for free. She later also used a quitclaim to give the house to another person.    

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

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

    Swing’s address in the record for the transfer is listed as Lenoir City, Tennessee, a two-hour drive from Nashville. 

    In March 2019, she also used a quitclaim to give away the house to a person named Betty Lane, according to county records

    According to her LinkedIn profile, she studied Marketing and Business and the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, where she remained working until 2012 when she moved to California. 

    Swing first lived in San Francisco before a move to Los Angeles in October 2018, where she works in artist development for Anschutz Entertainment Group.  

    Swing, 29, was given two homes by Warner but their link is unknown. She now lives in California

    Swing has claimed that she had no idea that the house had been transferred to her at no cost on November 25

    Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, signed the property away via a quitclaim deed to Michelle Swing, a 29-year-old woman living in Los Angeles, for $0.00, according to county records pictured above. Swing’s signature does not appear on the November 25th transfer and she told DailyMail.com she knew absolutely nothing about it

    According to records, in January 2019, Warner also transferred this $249,000 home to Swing

    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. 

    Cops had been called to the area around 6am following reports of shots fired. They arrived to find no evidence of a shooting but instead encountered the RV, which was playing a recording of a woman’s voice warning that it would explode in 15 minutes.  

    Six responding officers who rushed to evacuate the area have been hailed as heroes for their quick efforts in the face of grave danger. They are Officers Brenna Hosey, James Luellen, Michael Sipos, Amanda Topping, James Wells and Sergeant Timothy Miller. 

    Five of the officers described their version of events at a press conference on Sunday morning, revealing that the RV played the song Downtown by Petula Clark before it detonated.   

    Investigators immediately launched a frantic chase for the person who left the RV on the street. On Saturday officials said they were pursuing approximately 500 leads and have close to 250 agents and analysts assigned to the case.   

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

    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.   

    Neighbors reported seeing a white RV parked in Warner’s driveway. Agents are seen at the $160,000 home

    A member of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) is seen outside the home

    Law enforcement officers gather to investigate the house which was scanned for further bombs

    ATF police were seen searching the house and removing evidence from the basement

    Neighbors watch on as investigators search the home allegedly linked to the bombing suspect

    A member of law enforcement returns to his vehicle as the search on the home continues

    On Saturday, Tennessee Gov Bill Lee revealed that he has requested an emergency declaration from President Donald 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 came 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.  

    The blast injured three people and caused severe damage to the city’s downtown area 

    One man was walking his dog right by the RV and heard the warning message emanating from the vehicle. He is seen in a lobby on the city’s downtown area just before the blast

    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.

    This was the scene immediately after the explosion on Friday morning in downtown Nashville

    On Saturday morning, the Federal Aviation Administration  classified the airspace over the site of the bombing as ‘National Defense Airspace’. 

    The order prohibits pilots from flying over the site and a surrounding area of one nautical mile. The restriction will stay in place until December 30. 

    Meanwhile, the area on the ground has still been cordoned off and there is a strong police presence.

    Nashville Mayor Cooper said it will be ‘some time’ before 2nd Avenue is open as normal. 

    On Friday evening, he  announced curfew on the area around the bomb site as the investigation continued. 

    ‘A curfew will start at 4:30pm, Friday Dec 25. and be lifted Sunday, December 27 at 4:30pm,’ he revealed in a tweet. 

    The blast blew in windows from at least 41 buildings, according to CNN. One building is now partially collapsed. 

    The RV was parked outside an AT&T facility, with the explosion causing network outages to the company’s phone and internet services. 

    That issue sparked safety fears as 911 dispatchers were reportedly having trouble identifying the location of callers.  

    USA Today reports on Saturday that outage issues lasted into the evening. It is now believed they have all been resolved.   

    As of Saturday morning, the area has still been cordoned off and there is a strong police presence in the area

    Nashville Mayor John Cooper says it will be ‘some time’ before 2nd Avenue and the surround downtown area is open as normal

    This is what is left of Second Avenue in downtown Nashville after the explosion on Friday morning. Police have not yet identified a suspect 

    An aerial view of the scene in downtown Nashville on Friday morning after an ‘intentional’ explosion came from a parked car

    The scale of the debris was enormous. All of 2nd Avenue between The entire street on second avenue was covered with it

    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,’ Foster said.

    ‘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.  

    Emergency personnel work near the scene of an explosion in downtown Nashville, Tenn., Friday, Dec. 25, 2020

    A law enforcement member walks past damage from an explosion in downtown Nashville, Tenn., Friday, Dec. 25, 2020

    A vehicle burns near the site of an explosion in the area of Second and Commerce in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. December 25, 2020. It’s unclear if this was the vehicle that caused the blast or not

    Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9090623/Nashville-mayor-believes-bomber-targeting-T-building-suicide-attack.html