By Jared Evan
AP reported:
A 63-year-old Tennessee man, Anthony Q. Warner, was under investigation in connection with the blast, Nashville Metro Police spokesman Don Aaron said. He did not provide more details. Warner had experience with electronics and alarms, according to public records, and had worked as a computer consultant for a Nashville realtor.
Authorities have declared the remains found at the scene were those of the suspect, according to Fox News Sunday Afternoon.
Two days after the bizarre blast of an R.V parked outside an important At&T equipment building, which knocked cell phone service out of the area, what exactly happened is not clear.
One thing is certain, the alleged suspect did not want to harm anyone as it was fully confirmed that a warning message went off from the R.V telling people to clear the area.
Sunday morning., many news outlets reported that the FBI believes Warner may have been paranoid over 5G technology.
The person of interest authorities are honing in on — 63-year-old Anthony Quinn Warner — may have feared 5G was being used to spy on Americans, according to a report by the NBC affiliate in Nashville. While it is true many “conspiracy theorists” are against 5-G technology, the fear has more to do with health concerns from the tower signals, than spying on Americans. However, At&T was confirmed to have been working with the NSA on civilian surveillance for many years.
A high-quality video fo the explosion was captured by a surveillance camera and released by Tennessee authorities
The internet meanwhile is exploding with independent research from intrepid bloggers and sleuths.
An image captured from the suspect’s home, show a different R.V than the one which exploded at the scene.
The image from the suspect’s home shows and RV with 2 stripes, the other RV which exploded at the scene had one stripe.
Meanwhile, several bloggers believe that a thermobaric weapon, was used and it was not the RV that caused the explosion. None of this is confirmed, but noteworthy.
A thermobaric weapon, aerosol bomb, or vacuum bomb is a type of explosive that uses oxygen from the surrounding air to generate a high-temperature explosion.
This video from WhatDoesItMean.com argues this point.
Another rumor circulating widely on Twitter is that AT&T received a contract to do the forensic audit on Dominion voting machines and they were being transported to Nashville-Tennessee. This is being spread rapidly online, connecting the election fraud allegations to the explosion. TJV has not been able to verify this information.
Even more interesting as Newsweek pointed out in 2016, whistleblower Edward Snowden discovered that AT&T was running a surveillance program with the NSA and they had 8 hidden spy hubs, possibly the AT&T building which was damaged in the explosion was one of them.
The Intercept has an article — “The Wiretap Rooms—The NSA Has Hidden Spy Hubs in Eight Cities” that includes the following:
“‘The NSA considers AT&T to be one of its most trusted partners and has lauded the company’s ‘extreme willingness to help.’ It is a collaboration that dates back decades. Little known, however, is that its scope is not restricted to AT&T’s customers. According to the NSA’s documents, it values AT&T not only because it “has access to information that transits the nation,” but also because it maintains unique relationships with other phone and internet providers.”
Is there more than meets the eye in regards to this strange explosion, which clearly targeted the AT&T operation? The suspect did not want to hurt anybody but clearly targeted a telecommunications center. Was Warner the individual who actually perpetrated the explosion?
This story is exactly the kind of event that gets inquisitive juices flowing, in an age where nobody fully trusts the media or the government.

