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.
30.12.2020 - 03:11 / variety.com
Chris Willman Music WriterSinger Petula Clark has issued a statement conveying her dismay at her 1960s classic “Downtown” being blared from an explosives-laden recreational vehicle before it blew up in downtown Nashville Friday morning.“I feel the need to express my shock and disbelief at the Christmas Day explosion in our beloved Music City. I love Nashville and its people,” wrote Clark on Facebook.
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.D. Amorosi “Look at the world out there.”Barry Gibb is alluding to the several days of strife that accompanied Donald Trump’s most recent insurrection against the U.S.
The Tennessee Titans honored six first responders who were on the scene moments before an RV exploded in downtown Nashville on Christmas Day. Brenna Hosey, Tyler Luellen, Michael Sipos, Amanda Topping, James Wells and Sgt.Timothy Miller were the "Honorary 12th Titans" for the game against the Baltimore Ravens and also plunged a sword into the field to mark the countdown to the kickoff of the wild-card playoff game.
Christmas morning.“I was told that the music in the background of that strange announcement — was me — singing ‘Downtown'! Of all the thousands of songs — why this one?” Clark wrote on a Facebook post Tuesday.Clark said she loved Nashville and wished she could give everyone in the city a hug.The explosion took place in the heart of Nashville’s historic downtown. The blast killed the bomber, injured several people and damaged dozens of buildings.
Prior to his death, the man who detonated a Christmas Day bomb in downtown Nashville had sent out materials about his views to people he knew, federal investigators said Saturday.
@RedneckRiviera @rnrbarnash performer @Buckstergop #BuckMcCoy just recovered his guitar, and his cat from the debris from the #NashvilleBombing We all love ya bro! I know you're so happy to have them back
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.
The Nashville bomber’s family members weren’t happy to learn in 2019 that he had signed over his mother’s stake in a family-owned property to a 29-year-old woman in Los Angeles, the bomber’s lawyer claimed this week, according to a report.
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.
I feel the need to express my shock and disbelief at the Christmas Day explosion in our beloved Music City. I love…Posted by Petula Clark on Tuesday, December 29, 2020Clark added that “millions of people all over the world have been uplifted by this joyful song.”The singer cited the opening line of the 1964 hit tunebefore adding: “Perhaps you can read something else into these words – depending on your state of mind.
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.
The man suspected of detonating an RV bomb in Nashville on Christmas morning may have followed a number of conspiracy theories, believed in "lizard people" -- and spent time hunting for aliens, according to a new report. Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, also may have feared that 5G technology was a threat to health and liberty, law enforcement sources told ABC News.
Petula Clark is thinking of Nashville following the Christmas Day bombing.
The Tennessee man who officials say detonated a bomb in downtown Nashville in the early morning hours of Christmas Day allegedly used to spout anti-police rhetoric to a person he worked with, according to a recent report.
The FBI has released new photographs showing the aftermath of a Christmas Day explosion in Nashville, where Anthony Quinn Warner allegedly detonated a bomb from his vehicle after blaring an audio recording warning people to evacuate the area.
As investigators work to determine a motive behind the Christmas Day bombing in Nashville, attention has turned to a Los Angeles entertainment executive who was gifted two Tennessee homes by the suspect. Michelle Swing, 29, was given the two properties – worth more than $400,000 combined – in the past two years, despite paying nothing for them, property records show.
The suspect who authorities say was responsible for the Christmas Day bombing in Nashville reportedly told his neighbor in the days before the explosion that "Nashville and the world is never going to forget me." Rick Laude said he saw Anthony Quinn Warner standing at his mailbox on Dec. 21 and pulled over in his car to speak with him.