WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

697

> Authorities concluded that 63-year-old Anthony Quinn Warner (January 17, 1957 – December 25, 2020), a longtime resident of Nashville,[48][49][50] was the bomber, that his remains were found in the wreckage, and that there was no indication anyone else was involved.[1][42][51] The FBI is probing Warner's motive

Didn’t they originally use google maps to try to identify the RV that was used in the explosion? They had a guy in custody after using google maps! Why do that of a fucking body was found at the scene? This is fishy as hell. (((They))) really want you to forget this story.

>> Authorities concluded that 63-year-old Anthony Quinn Warner (January 17, 1957 – December 25, 2020), a longtime resident of Nashville,[48][49][50] was the bomber, that his remains were found in the wreckage, and that there was no indication anyone else was involved.[1][42][51] The FBI is probing Warner's motive Didn’t they originally use google maps to try to identify the RV that was used in the explosion? They had a guy in custody after using google maps! Why do that of a fucking body was found at the scene? This is fishy as hell. (((They))) really want you to forget this story.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

I always believe this was some test or dry run for something else bigger. He knocked out AT&T in a limited fashion for a few hours but they were back up and running the same day. If he was using OKC as a template he failed out the gate. The Ryder truck didn't cause that damage (the bombs planted in the building did) and Warner's bomb performed the same way. Minimal damage and limited interruption of communications. If it were a test, they have some lessons learned. If this were a mission, it failed.