10 things about Nashville, Tennessee’s Anthony Quinn Warner
Anthony Quinn “Tony” Warner was an American man from Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, United States. After retiring as a burglar alarm installer, he went on to work as a freelance information technology (IT) consultant.
BIOGRAPHY
An electronics and alarm systems expert, Warner did IT work for Nashville real estate agent Steve Fridrich for several years. In an interview with WSMV, the latter described the former as a “nice guy”.
“You know, he was a techie guy,” Fridrich said of Warner. “(I) don’t mean anything negative about that. He would do this thing and leave. He didn’t bother anybody.”
Warner has two siblings. Here are 10 more things about him:
He was born in Tennessee to Charles Bernard “Popeye” Warner and Betty C. Warner, also known as Betty Christine Lane. He owned Custom Alarms and Electronics, a company that specialized in producing burglar alarms.He has one brother named Charles Steven “Steve” L. Warner and one sister named Teresa Ann Warner Wardrop.In 1978, he was arrested in Nashville for felony possession of controlled substance, which was marijuana. In 1995, he and his family started living in their family house in Antioch, Nashville, which was eventually conveyed by their father to Steve via quit claim. In 2010, he bought a two-story red brick house in Antioch for $249,000. His parents divorced years before his father died in 2011.In 2018, his brother Steve died of cancer without leaving a will.In 2019, his mother filed a lawsuit against him.In 2020, he died in Nashville at age 63.TIMELINE
Tony was 5’8″ tall and his registered weight was 135 pounds. His father worked for BellSouth, a telecommunications company that merged into AT&T in 2006.
1970s
- On January 29, 1978, he was arrested in Nashville.
- On n November 8, 1979, he was found guilty of felony possession of controlled substance.
1980s
- Represented by Pat Flynn, he appeared before Judge Raymond Leathers on January 25, 1980.
- On August 27, 2018, the ownership of their family house in Antioch was transferred from Steve to him.
- In January 2019, he gave their family house in Antioch via a quit claim to Luz Maria Swing‘s daughter Michelle Louise Swing for $0 but on March 23, 2019, Michelle gave the house back to his mother via a quit claim.
- On November 29, 1993, his company Custom Alarms and Electronics obtained an alarm license.
- On November 30, 1998, the alarm license of his company Custom Alarms and Electronics expired.
2010s
- On July 5, 2011, his father died.
- On September 17, 2018, his brother Steve died.
- In February 2019, his mother filed a lawsuit against him, claiming that he acted with power of attorney on August 27, 2018 to transfer her interest in their family house in Antioch into his own name. The judge ruled that she was the appropriate person to control Steve’s estate.
- Images of his house two-story red brick house in Antioch captured on Google Maps in May 2019 show a white recreational vehicle parked in the yard, which was surrounded by a wooden fence.
- On August 21, 2019, his then girlfriend Pamela Perry told police Metropolitan Nashville Police Department officers that he was “building bombs in the RV trailer at his residence” in Antioch. He and Perry were represented by Ray Throckmorton, who told police that he “knows what he is doing and is capable of making a bomb.” When officers went to his house that day, they neither saw evidence of a crime nor had authority to enter his home or fenced property.
- In October 2019, the case filed by his mother against him was dismissed at her request.
2020s
- On January 17, 2020, he turned 63.
- On November 25, 2020, he gave the house he bought in Antioch in 2010 Michelle Swing via quit claim for $0.
- At around 6:45 a.m. on December 25, 2020, an RV exploded outside the AT&T transmission building on Second Avenue North in Nashville. It was similar to the RV seen parked outside his house on 115 Bakertown Road. Marco Rodriguez, who lived in the same building as him, told New Channel 5 Nashville that he recognized the vehicle, which “was parked over there all the time”.
- At around 11:00 a.m. on December 26, 2020, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agents went to his house on 115 Bakertown Road to investigate whether or not he was the man behind the RV explosion on December 25, 2020 in Nashville. At around 2:30 p.m., the agents cleared the house and confirmed that no one was inside.
- On December 27, 2020, authorities confirmed that he died in the explosion in Nashville on December 25, 2020 and the RV used in the explosion belonged to him.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2klfgS-kE8
#Antioch #DavidsonCounty #Nashville #Tennessee