The FBI wants to speak to anyone who may have received material from the man who, authorities say, detonated a bomb in downtown Nashville, Tennessee on Christmas Day.
The agency said it was aware that 63-year-old Anthony Q. Warner has sent materials to various acquaintances across the country.
“We are aware that the accused has sent material embracing his views to various acquaintances across the country,” Special Agent Jason Pack said in a statement to The Hill.
“Asked those who received these to contact the FBI at 800-CALL-FBI,” the statement continued. Pack did not specify what Warner may have shipped.
Officials confirmed that Warner was the suspect two days later the bombing, adding that he was killed in the explosion.
Authorities indicated that he was not on their radar prior to the bombing, but a police report released Tuesday revealed that Warner’s girlfriend had warned that he was firing bombs from his RV in August 2019.
Metro Nashville police have been released bodycam footage on Thursday documented the moments leading up to the explosion, in which eight people were injured and about 40 buildings damaged.
The explosion also disrupted AT&T communications in several states and temporarily grounded flights from the Nashville airport.