LA entertainment management linked to Nashville bomber

According to reports, the suspect who was wanted during the Christmas bombing in downtown Nashville allegedly transferred two properties to an executive in Los Angeles.

Provincial records obtained by Deadline show that Michelle Swing, an artist development director at AEG Presents, was given two homes by Anthony Quinn Warner, the man allegedly responsible for the bombing.

Warner gave Swing two homes through a claim: one worth $ 160,000 in January 2019 and another worth $ 250,000 last month, Deadline reported. Both homes are located in Antioch, about 20 miles from downtown Nashville, where the bombing took place.

Investigators are working on the scene of an explosion Saturday, December 26, 2020 in Nashville, Tenn.

Investigators are working on the scene of an explosion Saturday, December 26, 2020 in Nashville, Tenn.
(AP)

It was not immediately clear what the relationship was between the two. Swing reached out to other media and did not say whether she knew Warner and denied any knowledge of the two houses. She posed further questions to the FBI.

According to her LinkedIn page, Swing worked in the Knoxville area in the early 2010s before moving to San Francisco, where she worked as a project manager for Live Music & Festival Solutions.

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She worked at StubHub between February 2016 and September 2018 and then joined AEG Presents as director of artist development.

Federal officials said Sunday that the suspect in the Christmas Day explosion apparently acted alone, but they did not determine a motive.

Officials received hundreds of tips and clues, but concluded that none other than Warner were believed to be involved in the early-morning blast that damaged dozens of buildings.

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In revealing the suspect and his fate, officials revealed a major breakthrough in their investigation, even though they acknowledged the ongoing mystery behind the explosion, which took place on a holiday morning before the streets in the city center were teeming with activities and was accompanied by a recorded announcement. and warns someone nearby that a bomb will explode soon.

Associated Press contributed to this report.

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