Police in Nashville have arrested a second suspect in the murder of an intensive care nurse who was gunned down in December while heading to her job. Caitlyn Marie Kaufman, 26,was struck by bullets as she drove on Interstate 440 on Dec. 3.
29.12.2020 - 06:35 / foxnews.com
Police body camera footage taken from one of the six Nashville police officers credited with evacuating people before last week's Christmas Day bombing shows the moments before and after the blast that shook the city's downtown. The 13-minute video taken from Officer Michael Sipos' camera shows him and other officers walking in the area as they try to investigate a suspicious RV blaring a loud warning around 6:30 a.m.
"Your primary objective is to evacuate these buildings now," a voice can be
.Police in Nashville have arrested a second suspect in the murder of an intensive care nurse who was gunned down in December while heading to her job. Caitlyn Marie Kaufman, 26,was struck by bullets as she drove on Interstate 440 on Dec. 3.
A Tennessee woman faces charges after she allegedly stole and then crashed a police cruiser that she was allowed to sit inside while her house was on fire Tuesday afternoon, reports said. The woman was placed inside the cruiser after police said they found her distraught and shivering outside of her home in Kingston Springs, which is outside of Nashville, affiliate FOX 17 reported. She was identified as a 64-year-old woman.
The Christmas Day bombing in downtown Nasvhille damaged scores of buildings but did nothing to break the "resilient" spirit of residents and business owners. The owner of an art gallery heavily damaged by the blast is already vowing to rebuild and reopen.
Recordings of 911 calls during the Nashville bombing show the sheer panic and confusion in the moments before and after the Christmas morning explosion. Audio recordings, first obtained by affiliate news station FOX 5, provide a glimpse into the terror that surrounded the minutes before the explosion – when a suspicious recreational vehicle began blaring an announcement warning people to evacuate and that a bomb would detonate – and following the blast.
Despite reported suspicions last year that the suspect in the Nashville Christmas Day bombing was making explosives, officials on Wednesday said they found no evidence at the time to warrant a search of his home or recreational vehicle. Nashville police were called to a home on Aug. 21, 2019, over reports of a woman threatening to kill herself, police Chief John Drake told reporters.
Police visited the home of Nashville bomber Anthony Quinn Warner in 2019 after his girlfriend told authorities he was making bombs inside his recreational vehicle, according to a report.
British signer Petula Clark has expressed dismay and disappointment after her song “Downtown” could be heard playing from the suspected Nashville bomber’s explosives-filled vehicle moments before the tragic incident on Friday.
Petula Clark is thinking of Nashville following the Christmas Day bombing.
An East Tennessee lawmaker wants stronger oversight of the nation's telecommunications grid after a Christmas Day bombing in Nashville temporarily crippled infrastructure that caused 911 outages and a sudden unreliability in regional phone service. The security of America's cyberinfrastructure was highlighted in the attack, Rep.
Federal authorities on Sunday identified the suspect in the Christmas Nashville RV bombing as Anthony Quinn Warner. Investigators said they used DNA to identify human remains found at the scene to be that of 63-year-old Warner.The FBI said they also matched the RV’s vehicle identification number to a registration belonging to Warner.
The Nashville bombing on Christmas Day wiped out many prominent businesses on historic Second Avenue, including Pride and Glory Tattoo, whose owner Pete Gibson reports there’s nothing left of his shop at all. "[My store] was right there in the middle.
Police in Rutherford and Wilson counties in Tennessee are investigating a white box truck parked outside of a local convenience store playing audio "similar to what was heard before the Christmas Day explosion in Nashville." According to a statement by the Rutherford County Sheriff's Office, dispatchers received a call at about 10:30 a.m. regarding the truck, which was parked at Crossroads Market in Walter Hill.
As officials search the home of a 63-year-old man they believe to be a suspect in the Nashville bombing on Christmas, one local family told "Fox & Friends Weekend" they credit a pair of police officers for helping them escape their apartment moments before the blast. Police sources told "Fox News Sunday" they believe Anthony Quinn Warner of Antioch, Tenn., owned the RV that exploded, and that he died in the blast.
The explosive-laced RV parked in downtown Nashville played a warning message to evacuate, a countdown, and even blared the mid-60s hit song "Downtown" by Petula Clark minutes before it detonated into fiery blast early Christmas Day, injuring at least three civilians.
The suspect allegedly behind the Christmas Day bombing in downtown Nashville has been identified as 63-year-old Anthony Quinn Warner, two law enforcement sources confirmed to Fox News. Authorities believe Warner owned the RV that exploded in downtown Nashville early Friday, sources said.
Five of the six Nashville police officers who went knocking door-to-door to evacuate residents moments before an RV detonated in a fiery blast in the downtown area early Christmas Day detailed their account of events in a press conference Sunday, explaining that it would be a holiday they would never forget.