'5G' BOMBER

Nashville bomber Anthony Warner ‘targeted AT&T over paranoia that 5G tech was killing people after dad died of dementia’

THE Nashville bomber hoped he would be “hailed a hero” for targeting an AT&T building because he believed 5G tech was killing people, it is claimed.

Police are also reportedly probing whether Anthony Quinn Warner’s paranoia was fuelled by the death of his dementia-ridden dad – who worked for an AT&T subsidiary.

Nashville bomber Anthony Quinn Warner believed 5G was the ‘root of all deaths’, a report says

The bomb blast on Christmas Day, which injured three people, happened near an AT&T facility

Warner, 63, who died at the site of the bomb blast, was “heavily into conspiracy theories”, a report says.

On Christmas Day, a bomb planted by the IT worker in a motor home exploded in downtown Nashville injuring three people and wrecking nearby buildings.

Yesterday, DNA from human remains found at the blast site – located near an AT&T building – was matched to the 63-year-old.

According to the , Warner believed 5G was the “root of all deaths in the region”.

Baseless conspiracy theories have emerged online this year about ultra-fast 5G internet including that it’s a tool to spy on people.

Another wild claim is that the broadband network has fueled the spread of Covid-19.

Since Warner has been named as the bomber, police have reportedly seized his electronic devices from this home in Antioch, Nashville.

A source told the Mail: “We are waiting on the digital footprint that should finally provide us with some answers.

“The unofficial motive thus far is the suspect believed 5G was the root of all deaths in the region and he’d be hailed a hero.”

And cops are investigating whether Warner was motivated by the death of his father Charles B. Warner, the report says.

Charles, who died of dementia in 2011 aged 78, worked for BellSouth, a former subsidiary of AT&T which re-merged with the telecommunications giant in 2006.

Reuters
Warner reportedly believed that 5G tech was killing people. A 5G antenna is pictured being installed in San Diego

Universal News & Sport (Scotland)
Human remains found at the site of the Nashville bombing were confirmed to be Anthony Quinn Warner

The Sun
The Nashville home investigated on Saturday

Reuters
Armed cops gather outside the bomber’s home in Antioch

Harrison McClary
Investigators found the home to be ‘clean and organised’, The Sun revealed

Nashville Mayor John Cooper also told CBS’s Face The Nation that he suspects the AT&T building was targeted by the bomber.

“[It] feels like there has to be some connection to the AT&T facility and the site of the bombing,” he said

“That is a bit of local insight, it has to have something to do with the infrastructure.”

This comes after The Sun exclusively revealed that“

A report seen by The Sun said the home investigated by cops on Saturday was “clean and organized.”

As Warner was named as the suspect of the bombing,

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“I‘m devastated and upset. I can’t say any more,” she told The Sun in an exclusive interview.

It was also revealed by The Sun on Sunday  to spend a few weeks in the woods with his dogs.”

Warner gifted two homes, both on Bakertown Road in Nashville, to the 29-year-old – although Swing claims she had no knowledge of the winfall.

She is not suspected of any wrongdoing in the incidents.

Facebook
Michelle Swing was gifted two homes by Warner

Reuters
Warner was ‘heavily into conspiracy theories’, a report says

AP:Associated Press
Rubble is seen after the Christmas Day bombing
Suicide bomb by Anthony Quinn Warner explodes in Nashville on Christmas morning
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