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The FBI investigates the home of a possible suspect in the Nashville explosion

2020-12-26T21:10:52.569Z


Senior officials confirmed to our sister network NBC News that they are searching the home of Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, in Antioquia. Tennessee Governor Bill Lee announced Saturday that he has requested an emergency declaration from the president.


The FBI has identified a possible suspect in connection with Friday's explosion in Nashville.

Senior officials confirmed to our sister network NBC News that they are searching the home of Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, in Antioquia, in the suburbs of the city.

WSMV, an affiliate of NBC News, confirmed that the FBI is on its way to the 100 block of Bakertown Rd, in that city.

A Google image of the address shows a caravan that identically matches the description Nashville police say was used in the bombing, and is found parked in the backyard of Warner's home.

According to WSMV, the motorhome is no longer at Warner's address.

The officers assured that they are investigating whether this person may have been responsible for the bombing.

They noted that they still want to know more about where the motorhome has been and are still asking the public to follow any leads.

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee announced on Saturday that he requested an emergency declaration from President Donald Trump after the powerful explosion that occurred in downtown Nashville, the state capital.

"The

severity and magnitude

of the current situation is such that effective response is beyond the capabilities of the affected state and local governments," Lee said in a statement.

"I am confident that

we will find this individual or these individuals,

" said FBI spokesman Doug Korneski this Saturday afternoon at a press conference.

Korneski declined to confirm that there is a person of interest identified in connection with the explosion of the caravan in Nashville. 

The FBI said it is investigating

more than 500 leads and that it has deployed more than 250 agents in the area.

Although there have been no indications of other explosive threats, authorities are continuing to investigate any possible motive.

"It's going to take us some time," Korneski said.

"Our research team is going through every stone," he added, to understand who did this and why.

"We have to be patient," Police Chief John Drake said.

Also,

major communication outages

 continue to affect large areas of Tennessee this Saturday.

The

Tennessee and Kentucky police emergency systems,

as well as the Nashville COVID-19 Community Helpline, remain down as an AT&T central office was affected by the blast. 

[Human Remains and Recording: Nashville Explosion Raises New Questions]

The AT&T company said the restoration efforts are facing several challenges, including a fire that "restarted overnight and led to the evacuation of the building."

This has forced his teams to work with security and structural engineers and to drill access holes to the building to reconnect power. 

The company assured that it had installed

two temporary cell towers

in the city center to provide service and that other portable sites were being installed.

This image taken from a surveillance camera provided by the Nashville Metro shows a recreational vehicle that was involved in the explosion on Friday, December 25, 2020, in Nashville, Tenn. Nashville Metro via AP

"Our teams continue to work day and night on recovery efforts from yesterday morning's explosion in Nashville," the company said in a statement Saturday.

At least 41 buildings were damaged,

and communications systems, including home and cell phone service and 911 call centers, failed across the state, Lee said.

Kentucky and northern Alabama were also affected, he

said.

The blackouts had even briefly landed flights at Nashville International Airport, but service continued normally as of Saturday.

[The explosion in downtown Nashville on Christmas morning: authorities believe it was "intentional"]

According to Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake, police officers responded to a report of gunfire on Friday when they came across a motor home that broadcast a

message over a loudspeaker warning that a bomb would explode in 15 minutes.

The police evacuated nearby buildings and called the bomb squad.

The motorhome exploded shortly after.

Officers have said they believe

the explosion was intentional but do not yet know the motive or purpose.

"This morning I toured the scene of the attack," Lee wrote on Saturday.

"The damage

is shocking

and it is a miracle that no resident died," he added.

They will search the security cameras in the area for more details to help with the investigation REUTERS

Nashville authorities said Friday night they

found tissue that could be human remains

in the area of ​​the blast.

No deaths have been confirmed from the incident so far, said City Mayor John Cooper, Police Chief John Drake and Fire Department Director William Swann.

The tissues found will be examined to determine more details, according to the mayor, who added that the three people who were hospitalized for injuries are stable. 

Mayor Cooper declared a

state of emergency

in the city center in effect until December 27.

With information from AP and CBS News.

Source: telemundo

All news articles on 2020-12-26

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