Anthony Warner sent packages to friends before the Nashville bombing

Before detonating a bomb-laden trailer on a downtown Nashville street early on Christmas morning, he assumed that bomber Anthony Warner had sent packages to several individuals.

One of those packages arrived in a man’s mailbox on New Year’s Day, postmarked December 23, two days before Warner died in the blast, News Channel 5 Nashville reported.

The local independent station said the package contains at least nine typed pages and two Samsung thumb drives. The recipient handed it over to the FBI immediately.

The envelope has no return address, but the errant pages inside left no doubt that it was from Warner.

“Hey, man,” begins the cover letter, “You will never believe what I found in the park.”

“The knowledge I have acquired is immeasurable. Now I understand everything, and I mean everything, from who / what we really are, to what the known universe really is. “

The letter was signed by “Julio”, the name of his dog, and a name that Warner’s friends say he used to use to sign e-mails.

The letter urged his friend to watch some videos from the Internet that he included on two Samsung thumb drives. He also mentioned the 9/11 conspiracy theories and contained the comment: “The moon landing and 9/11 have so many anomalies that they are difficult to count.”

Warner, who was known to be involved in conspiracy theories, wrote that “September 2011 should be the final game for the planet” because it was when he believed that aliens and UFOs started launching attacks on Earth that the media is covering up.

The ramblings also included writing about reptilians and lizards that he believed controlled the land and had altered human DNA. “They put a switch on the human brain so they could walk between us and look like humans,” wrote Warner.

These thoughts seem to echo other writing researchers are looking at.

Anthony Warner, Nashville bomber
Anthony Warner
FBI via AP

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