NASHVILLE: FBI agents investigating the Nashville motor home explosion visited a real estate agency where, local media reported on Sunday, an individual of interest in the bombing had operated on computers.
Steve Fridrich, owner of Fridrich & Clark Realty in the Green Hills area of Nashville, told the Tennessean newspaper he talked about Anthony Q. Warner, 63, with the agents late Saturday, after the company told the FBI that he had worked there.
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Warner had lived in a home in Antioch, southeast of Nashville, according to public records, which was searched on Saturday by officials from the FBI and the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Weapons and Explosives following the massive Christmas Day explosion.
Warner is under investigation in the case, a spokesperson for the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department stated.
Federal agents have said more than 500 leads are being followed up and are trying to locate what appears to be human remains contained in the rubble.Game of Thrones founder killed by poisoningFederal agents have said more than 500 leads are being followed up and are trying to locate what appears to be human remains contained in the rubble.
Three people were wounded by the explosion in the heart of America’s country music capital and more than 40 companies were destroyed, including an AT&T switching centre, disrupting telephone, internet and TV services throughout central Tennessee and parts of four other states.
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Federal agents have said more than 500 leads are being followed up and are trying to locate what appears to be human remains contained in the rubble.
Three people were wounded by the explosion in the heart of America’s country music capital and more than 40 companies were destroyed, including an AT&T switching centre, disrupting telephone, internet and TV services throughout central Tennessee and parts of four other states.
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