MORE Intel Surfaces About Nashville Bomber

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Nashville

Fresh intelligence reports just surfaced which confirm that Nashville Police and the FBI were both notified that Anthony Warner was building bombs in his RV but didn’t do anything about it. They knew a year-and-a-half ago. Apparently, the Federal Bureau of Instigation was too busy chasing those elusive Russians infiltrating the Trump campaign to bother with domestic terrorists, unless they thought he might come in handy to act on cue later for one of their Deep State operations and misjudged the timing.

FBI knew about Nashville bomb builder

On Monday, after sifting through the rubble of downtown Nashville, Tennessee, the state’s Bureau of Investigation Director, David Rausch, claimed that 63-year-old Anthony Warner had not previously been on law enforcement radar. He lied.

According to a report written up on August 21, 2019, local police and the FBI both knew that Warner was “building bombs in the RV trailer at his residence.”

Nashville

Metropolitan Nashville Police Department filled out a “matter of record” report when they got a call from local attorney Raymond Throckmorton. He represented Pamela Perry and wanted to alert the police that her boyfriend had made “suicidal threats.”

The cops got that wrong on the phone and thought Ms. Perry was the one making threats. When they got to her home, they thought the two unloaded handguns in plain sight near Perry were hers, until the lawyer got them sorted out. The weapons belonged to her boyfriend, Anthony Warner, and she wanted them out of her house.

The reason she didn’t want to be in the same building as Warner’s weapons is because, as she told Nashville police at the time, “Warner was building bombs in the RV trailer at his residence.” You don’t say. Throckmorton also knew Warner because he had once represented the man.

His client had the skills

The lawyer had no doubt that his former client had the skills, telling the police that Warner “frequently talks about the military and bomb-making and he believes that the suspect knows what he is doing and is capable of making a bomb.”

He was right. The explosion Friday outside an AT&T transmission building in Nashville damaged more than 40 buildings and injured at least eight people.

Police went straight over to Warner’s property. He wouldn’t answer the door so they went away.

That was the end of it. Now that there is a crater in the middle of the culture district, Nashville police are struggling to explain how they dropped the ball, issuing a statement that “because there was no evidence of a crime, they had no authority to enter his home.”

They called the FBI. A check of the database found “no records” related to Warner.

Since direct statements of two witnesses, under oath, one of them being made by an attorney and former Mayor, are not considered as “evidence” to the Nashville police or the FBI, they simply did nothing.

Many Americans, who are familiar with how the trolls on social media work, wonder if the FBI was grooming him from the shadows and he blew himself up before they were ready.

Nashville

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