The Sun (Lowell)

Bomber: World is ‘never going to forget me’

- By Kimberlee Kruesi, denise lavoie and Michael Balsamo

nashville, tenn. » It seemed like a friendly chat between neighbors. Only after a bomb exploded in downtown Nashville on Christmas morning could Rick Laude grasp the sinister meaning behind his neighbor’s smiling remark that the city and the rest of the world would never forget him.

Laude told The Associated Press on Monday that he was speechless when he learned that authoritie­s identified his 63-year-old neighbor, Anthony Quinn Warner, as the man suspected of detonating a bomb that killed himself, injured three other people and damaged dozens of buildings.

Laude said he saw Warner standing at his mailbox less than a week before Christmas and pulled over in his car to talk. After asking how Warner’s elderly mother was doing, Laude said he casually asked, “Is Santa going to bring you anything good for Christmas?”

Warner smiled and said, “Oh, yeah, Nashville and the world is never going to forget me,” Laude recalled.

Laude said he didn’t think much of the remark and thought Warner only meant that “something good” was going to happen for him financiall­y.

“Nothing about this guy raised any red flags,” Laude said. “He was just quiet.”

Laude said Warner sometimes did not respond when he and other neighbors waved to him, but said he did not take it personally. “I knew that he was just a recluse,” he said.

As investigat­ors continued to search for a motive, body camera video released late Monday by Nashville police offered more insight to the moments leading up to the explosion and its aftermath.

The recording from Officer Michael Sipos’ camera captures officers walking past the RV parked across the street as the recorded warning blares and then helping people evacuate after the thunderous blast off camera. Car alarms and sirens wailed as a police dispatch voice called for all available personnel and people stumbled through downtown streets littered with glass.

Warner left behind clues that suggest he planned the bombing and intended to kill himself, but a clear motive remained elusive.

“We hope to get an answer. Sometimes, it’s just not possible,” David Rausch, the director of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion, said Monday in an interview on NBC’S “Today” show. “The best way to find motive is to talk to the individual. We will not be able to do that in this case.”

Investigat­ors are analyzing Warner’s belongings collected during the investigat­ion, including a computer and a portable storage drive, and continue to interview witnesses as they try to identify a motive for the explosion, a law enforcemen­t official said. A review of his financial transactio­ns also uncovered purchases of potential bomb-making components, the official said.

 ?? Courtesy of fbi via ap ?? anthony Quinn Warner
Courtesy of fbi via ap anthony Quinn Warner

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