Nashville company, property owners visit the bombing site as the investigation continues

More than 225 business owners and homeowners visited the Nashville bombing area on Tuesday to begin the process of security and reconstruction of downtown streets destroyed in the Christmas Day explosion, police said.

The Nashville Metro Police Department announced in a tweet on Tuesday that commercial operators and building owners went to the “protected area” around the wreckage earlier in the day.

The photographs show uniformed workers and plainclothes people wearing helmets and walking down Nashville Street.

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Visitors worked with the Nashville Police Department and FBI victim experts, who provided tarps and plywood for broken windows and doors, the tweet said.

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Dozens of companies were damaged or destroyed on Friday morning when a man, identified by authorities as Anthony Quinn Warner, detonated an explosive along 2nd Avenue North.

Warner was reportedly inside a trailer parked near an AT&T building when he started broadcasting an audio recording urging people nearby to evacuate and warning that a bomb would go off in minutes. The dark recording changed to Petula Clark’s “Downtown” before the explosion followed.

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Police said three people were injured and Warner died. The reason for the explosion was not revealed.

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