The killer of the car explosion shaken in the US during Christmas was an internet engineer in his 60s

On the 25th of Christmas, a vehicle explosion in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, USA, has turned the road into a mess and the vehicle is burning. Nashville = AP Yonhap News

A suspect in a vehicle explosion in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, who surprised the entire United States on Christmas morning, was identified as a man in his 60s with a license to use explosives.

US investigative authorities confirmed that the suspect Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, committed suicide by exploding his own recreational vehicle (RV) on the 27th (local time), US media such as CNN and Fox News reported at once. CNN said the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) conducted a background check of some of the harmful genes (DNAs) found in the field. The investigative authorities also collected DNA from the Warner family, collated and investigated it.

In the announcement of the results of the investigation that afternoon, the Tennessee Central Prosecutors’ Office Prosecutor Don Cochran said, “We concluded that the killer was Anthony Warren.” As a result of the identification, it was reported that the DNA was consistent.

Suspect Warner was an internet engineer. CNN said he was issued a permit to use explosives in 2013, and his license expired in 2016.

The Nashville WSMV broadcast cited a source familiar with the progress of the investigation, and reported that the FBI was confirming whether Warner had the idea that’the fifth generation (5G) network is a tool for spying on Americans’.

On the morning of the 25th, a car parked near AT&T, a telecommunications company in downtown Nashville, Tennessee’s capital, exploded and injured three people. In addition, dozens of buildings’ windows and walls were damaged by the explosion, and vehicles parked nearby were also burned, and traffic around the city was banned. He played the American pop song’Downtown’ in the 1960s just before the car explosion, and it is known that he also broadcast an explosion warning.

Immediately after the explosion, the US investigative authorities reported it as an intentional incident and conducted an investigation. In particular, AT&T’s network equipment was affected by an explosion at the time, and AT&T services were partially interrupted in some areas in Tennessee and Kenter. The FBI and others were investigating whether the location of the explosion was accidentally selected or intended.

Washington= Jeong Won Correspondent

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