El Dorado News-Times

Police at bomber’s home in 2019

Girlfriend spoke about RV, bomb-making, report says

- KIMBERLEE KRUESI, HALELUYA HADERO AND MIKE BALSAMO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Eric Tucker of The Associated Press.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — More than a year before Anthony Warner detonated a bomb in downtown Nashville on Christmas Day last week, officers visited his home after his girlfriend told police he was building bombs in an RV trailer at his residence, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press. But they did not make contact with him or see inside his RV.

Officers were called to Pamela Perry’s home in Nashville on Aug. 21, 2019, after a report from her attorney that she was making suicidal threats while sitting on her front porch with firearms, the Metropolit­an Nashville Police Department said in an emailed statement Tuesday.

According to the incident report, when officers arrived, police said she had two unloaded pistols beside her on the porch. She told them the guns belonged to “Tony Warner” and she did not want them in the house any longer. Perry, then 62, then was transporte­d for a psychologi­cal evaluation after speaking to mental health profession­als on the phone.

The report says police went to Warner’s home, about 1.5 miles from Perry’s home, but he didn’t answer the door when they knocked repeatedly. They saw the RV in the backyard, the report said, but the yard was fenced off, and officers couldn’t see inside the vehicle.

The report said there also were “several security cameras and wires attached to an alarm sign on the front door” of the home. Officers then notified supervisor­s and detectives.

=Law enforcemen­t officials did not publicly release the report, but it was revealed after news outlets submitted public records requests. Later, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion announced that Warner’s only arrest was for a 1978 marijuana-related charge.

David Rausch, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion’s director, had told reporters earlier this week that Warner was not on their radar. Rausch was flanked by federal and state officials who did not object or amend the statement.

Nashville Police Chief John Drake later told reporters Wednesday that he didn’t learn of the report until late Sunday evening but that he believed his officers who reported that there was no probable cause for a search warrant.

“I believe the officers did everything they could legally. Maybe they could have followed up more, hindsight is 20/20,” Drake said, adding that Warner had a “squeaky clean” background outside of the decades-old marijuana charge.

News that Warner’s former girlfriend had tried to alert authoritie­s that he may have been building bombs came as federal agents were continuing to examine Warner’s digital footprint and writings, a law enforcemen­t official said.

Investigat­ors are also scrutinizi­ng whether Warner believed in multiple conspiracy theories after being told by some of the people they’ve interviewe­d that Warner believed that shape-shifting reptiles take on a human form to take over society and that he discussed taking trips to hunt aliens, the official said. Investigat­ors have also been asking witnesses whether Warner believed in any conspiraci­es about 5G technology.

The official could not discuss the investigat­ion publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The report also said attorney Raymond Throckmort­on told officers that day that he represente­d Warner and that Warner “frequently talks about the military and bomb making,” the police report said. Warner “knows what he is doing and is capable of making a bomb,” Throckmort­on told responding officers.

On Tuesday, Throckmort­on said Perry had fears about her safety and thought Warner might harm her.

After officers visited Warner’s home in August last year, the Police Department’s hazardous devices unit was given a copy of the police report. During the week of Aug. 26, 2019, they contacted Throckmort­on. Police said officers recalled Throckmort­on saying Warner “did not care for the police,” and that he wouldn’t allow Warner “to permit a visual inspection of the RV.”

Throckmort­on disputes that he told police they couldn’t search the vehicle and says he only represente­d Warner in a civil case several years previously.

Drake said he believed the officers’ account.

A day after officers visited Warner’s home, the police report and identifyin­g informatio­n about Warner were sent to the FBI to check their databases and determine whether Warner had previous military connection­s, police said.

Later that day, the Police Department said “the FBI reported back that they checked their holdings and found no records on Warner at all.” FBI spokespers­on Darrell DeBusk said the agency had conducted a standard agency-to-agency record check.

Six days later, “the FBI reported that Department of Defense checks on Warner were all negative,” the Police Department said.

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