Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
Joe Hillshoist » Tue Dec 29, 2020 6:57 pm wrote:There is a screenshot of a tweet from "4 days ago" doing the rounds that claims the AT&T building was hosting the voting machines. It only appeared after the bombing as far as i can tell.
dada » Thu Dec 31, 2020 12:11 pm wrote:Maybe the other reptiles are feeling discriminated against. The virtue signalling turtles, snakes and crocodiles demand social justice. Soon they'll want their own seperate class, like the birds. Where will it end?
JackRiddler » Thu Dec 31, 2020 10:54 am wrote:Sure I saw your warning but why would I be offended. The Upchurch part was also interesting to learn, so I highlighted it.
PS - Love & Happiness, wondrous 2021.
The cover letter was signed by "Julio," a name Warner's friends say he often used when sending them e-mails.
dada » Mon Jan 04, 2021 12:18 pm wrote:I wonder what he found in the park?
Julio might just be a screen name. Say it's the name he used online when posting to the Reptilian Resistance boards, 'Save the Males' and whatnot. He'd sign Julio when addressing people he knows from online interactions in those circles, the name he uses that they'd be familiar with.
At the core. So I think a lone act like this, courtesy and all, and a riot at the Capitol in support of dear leader, can be seen as manifestations of virtually the same ideology.
Los Angeles Entertainment Executive Tied To Suspected Nashville Bomber
By Bruce Haring
December 27, 2020 12:45pm
A Los Angeles entertainment executive has been connected to the main suspect in the Christmas morning bombing in Nashville, according to numerous news reports.
Michelle Swing, a downtown L.A. resident and artist development director at AEG Presents, was reportedly given two houses by Anthony Quinn Warner, who has been named as one of the main persons of interest in the Christmas morning bombing in Nashville that devastated a city block.
In that bombing incident, a white RV was parked on the street and started to broadcast a warning to evacuate the area. It also reportedly played a recording of Petula Clark’s 1965 pop hit, Downtown. Police are still investigating the incident.
According to reports, Warner gave Swing a $160,000 house via a quit claim in January 2019 in the Nashville neighborhood of Antioch, located 12 miles from downtown. Then, on November 25, Warner gave Swing another Antioch house worth $249,999 via quit claim.
It has not yet been revealed what the connection was between the 63-year-old Quinn and Swing, who worked in Knoxville, Tennessee at AC Entertainment as a marketing coordinator from May 2011 to May 2012. The agency handles the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival, among other properties.
Swing moved on to become a senior project manager at Vendini (now known as AudienceView Select), a technology ticketing agency in San Francisco. She joined ticket seller StubHub in February 2016, lasting until September 2018 as a partnership and business development manager in San Francisco.
She then joined AEG in Los Angeles in October 2018.
Swing told DailyMail.com that “I’ve been told to direct everything else to the FBI” and declined to disclose whether she had ever met Warner or if she had any family links to him. She also denied knowledge of having the homes signed over to her.
Nashville bomber's property transfers to 29-year-old LA woman created schism in the family
Natalie Allison Nashville Tennessean
Published 1:00 p.m. CT Dec. 30, 2020
A Nashville attorney who represented Anthony Quinn Warner during a family real estate dispute in early 2019 said his former client gave property to a young woman whose mother he knew personally and the transaction created a schism within the Warner family.
Warner, 63, of Antioch, died on Christmas morning in an explosion in downtown Nashville after police say he set off a bomb. He parked his RV on Second Avenue andthen blared evacuation warnings. The bomb exploded about 6:30 a.m., causing massive damage to 41 buildings downtown.
Ray Throckmorton III told The Tennessean he represented Warner in 2018 and 2019.
According to a lawsuit filed by Warner's mother in February 2019, he was acting as "attorney-in-fact" for his brother when Warner transferred his mother's stake in a family home to himself by a quitclaim deed. Warner later transferred the home to a 29-year-old woman who lives in Los Angeles.
The family property at 3724 Bakertown Road, which at the time had a market value of nearly $230,000, was given for free by Warner to the Los Angeles woman in January 2019.
The woman did not have to sign the quitclaim deed to accept the property, according to public documents. In August 2019, the 29-year-old deeded the home back to Warner's mother.
"I remember him saying he knew her mother personally," Throckmorton said of how Warner was connected to the young woman. The Nashville attorney also said Warner described the recipient of the house as "the child of a friend of his."
Throckmorton didn't pry further about the connection, he said, and Warner didn't elaborate on why he transferred the property.
"We never asked and never made any inquires or any connections as to why he wanted to do that," said Throckmorton, who has practiced law for three decades.
Then in November 2020 — one month before the bombing — records show Warner transferred the home he lived in at 115 Bakertown Road to the young woman.
Warner ended his client relationship with Throckmorton after he became unhappy with the status of the 2019 family dispute case, the attorney said.
[...]
Users browsing this forum: SonicG and 11 guests