© Reuters / The Tennessean / USA Today Network / Mark Zaleski; Reuters / FBI HandoutFILE PHOTOS: Bystanders photograph buildings at the site of the Christmas Day bombing in Nashville, Tennessee, December 29, 2020; (R) Anthony Quinn Warner, who was named as the suspect in the bombing.
Days before blowing himself up, the Nashville Christmas bomber penned lengthy messages to "acquaintances" speaking of "alien attacks," a faked moon landing and DNA experiments by "lizard people," among other conspiracy theories.
The man identified as the main suspect behind the bombing, 63-year-old Anthony Warner, mailed the strange missives to several people he knew before carrying out the attack late last month, federal investigators
said. One of the letters, sent with a package containing multiple USB drives, went on for at least nine pages and apparently detailed Warner's beliefs,
according to a Nashville CBS affiliate.
The cover page begins casually - "Hey Dude. You will never believe what I found in the park" - but soon takes on a more esoteric tone:
The knowledge I have gained is immeasurable. I now understand everything, and I mean everything from who/what we really are, to what the known universe really is.
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