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Police probe truck playing audio similar to Nashville bomb RV [Video]

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WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:


  • On Sunday, officials and news outlets said that the local police in Rutherford and Wilson Counties were probing a white truck parked outside the city as it played familiar audio which was heard during the Nashville Christmas day explosion.
  • No explosives were found on the truck but the driver was charged.
  • A police robot was used to search the vehicle.

Local authorities and outlets on Sunday claimed that the police inspected a white truck outside the city as it played an audio “similar” to the RV that exploded in downtown Nashville on Christmas morning. Fortunately, the inquiry ruled out a potential explosion.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQR01kxVDDQ

“Sheriff’s deputies in Rutherford and Wilson Counties are investigating a box truck parked at a store playing audio similar to the Christmas explosion in Nashville,” the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office wrote on Twitter Sunday afternoon. “The driver was stopped by deputies and detained. Residents evacuated. Investigation active.”

Authorities later advised local news outlets that the truck was cleared from explosives.

Before the explosion on Christmas day, a creepy audio recording was played from the RV, giving a warning to locals of the upcoming blast and to evacuate immediately.

A classic pop song by Petula Clark titled ‘Downtown” was also being played from the vehicle from time to time.

According to local Fox affiliate WZTV, at about 10:30 am Sunday, the Sheriff’s Office dispatchers received a call regarding the white box truck located near Highway 231 within the vicinity of the Cedars of Lebanon State Park.

In a video clip posted by local NBC affiliate WSMV, a police robot was approaching the vehicle to search and locate probable explosives.

The park was located approximately 30 miles east of Nashville, where the Christmas explosion occurred outside an AT&T building last Friday. There were four casualties, including the death of the suspect named Anthony Quinn Warner.

Investigators are probing whether the explosion detonated by Warner, who could have harbored fears on “5G cellular technology” and “alleged surveillance of Americans.”

Source: New York Post

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