San Antonio Express-News

‘Hindsight is 20/20’: Police knew of Nashville bomber a year earlier

- By Kimberlee Kruesi, Haleluya Hadero and Michael Balsamo

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — More than a year before Anthonywar­ner detonated a Christmas Day bomb in downtown Nashville, officers visited his home after his girlfriend told police he was building bombs in a recreation­al vehicle at his residence. But they didn’t make contact with him, or see inside his RV.

Those revelation­s, contained in a newly disclosed 2019 incident report, put Nashville’s police chief on the defensive Wednesday as he said his officers did nothing wrong and that they had handled the situation properly. He added that other than a 1970s marijuana-related arrest, Warner was “squeaky clean.”

“I believe the officers did everything they could legally. Maybe they could have followed up more — hindsight is 20/20,” Metro Nashville Police Chief Johndrake said at a news conference.

Officers were called to Pamela Perry’s Nashville home 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 police de

partment said in a statement.

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 didn’t want them in the house any longer. Perry, then 62, was takenfor a psychologi­cal evaluation after speaking to mental health profession­als.

“During that visit, before leaving for the evaluation, Perry told police that her boyfriend was making bombs in an RV,” the report stated.

The report says police went to

Warner’s home, but he didn’t answer the door when they knocked repeatedly. They saw the RV but it was in a fenced-off backyard and officers couldn’t see inside the vehicle. They also spotted several security cameras and wires attached to an alarm sign on a front door.

“They saw no evidence of a crime and had no authority to enter his home or fenced property,” the police statement said, adding supervisor­s and detectives were then notified.

“If we could have had more to go off of, it wouldhave been good,” Drake said.

 ?? Mark Humphrey / Associated Press ?? A vehicle destroyed in a Christmas Day explosion by a suicide bomber remains on the street in Nashville, Tenn.
Mark Humphrey / Associated Press A vehicle destroyed in a Christmas Day explosion by a suicide bomber remains on the street in Nashville, Tenn.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States