Los Angeles woman bereaved of Nashville bomber’s property: Family


Family members of the Nashville bomber were not happy in 2019 when they signed a 29-year-old woman in Los Angeles to sign her mother’s share in the family-owned property, the bomber’s lawyer claimed this week, according to a report.

The California woman returned her share to the mother of Anthony Quinn Warner, a 63-year-old Tennessee man who later died inside her recreational vehicle that exploded on Christmas morning in Nataville, Tennessee. Nashville reported.

The home was valued at about 0 230,000 at the time and Warner did not ask for money in return from the Los Angeles woman, the report said.

Then last month, records suggest Warner owned another property – his own home in Antioch, Tennessee – the same L.A. Transferred to the woman, the report said.

Attorney Ray Throckmorton III told the newspaper he introduced Warner in his personal matters in 2018 and 2019 – until he had a 2019 property transfer reduction.

Nashville told the bomber’s district friend that in 2019, he would be driving an RV. Created Explosive inside: Report

The California woman was “her friend’s child,” Werner said.

This indeterminate picture, posted on social media by the FBI, shows Anthony Quinn Warner, the man Nataville, Tennyson, accused of detonating on Christmas Day.  (Courtesy of FBI via AP)

This indeterminate picture, posted on social media by the FBI, shows Anthony Quinn Warner, the man Nataville, Tennyson, accused of detonating on Christmas Day. (Courtesy of FBI via AP)

“I remind him that he knew his mother personally,” Throkmart told the newspaper. He never pressed Warner for more details on why Warner was transferring control over the property.

The New York Post reports that wealth records identify the Los Angeles woman as Michelle Swing, a music industry executive who studied at a college lodge in Tennessee before moving to California in 2012. The report said Swing declined to comment on Werner and deleted his social media accounts.

Throckmort described Warner as a “tech, computer-savvy guy” who seemed intelligent, but also appeared distrustful of others.

According to Tennessee, prosecutors added that “there was no chat with them.”

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Tennessee reported that police visited Warner’s property on a girlfriend’s report Wednesday after Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake defended his officers – but did not conduct an investigation even after failing to find possible legal clues. Breaking.

“At no point was there evidence of reasonable suspicion that a crime was being committed and officers have no legal basis to go into Warner’s fenced-in yard and building,” Drake said. “We have no legal basis for search warrants or subpoenas based on what we knew at the time.”

The FBI also found no signs of suspicious activity by Warner, officials said.

The bomber struck shortly after noon in front of a crowd of more than 40 people, officials said. Six Nashville police officers have been credited with saving lives by helping people evacuate the area by listening to warnings from RVs before the blast and advising people to leave the area.