Nashville Mayor John Cooper to Discuss Future of Second Avenue in the Wake of Last Year’s Christmas Day Bombing

 

Nashville Mayor John Cooper is scheduled to discuss the future of Second Avenue, nearly one year after it and several businesses got bombed on Christmas Day.

Cooper is scheduled to join members of his Second Avenue Task Force at 10 a.m. Wednesday, December 8, at The Wildhorse Saloon at 120 Second Avenue in Nashville.

This, according to an emailed press release.

“Metro Nashville and Davidson County residents can view this event on Metro Nashville Network (MNN) by tuning in to Comcast channel 3 or AT&T Uverse channel 99,” the press release said.

MNN will stream live coverage at stream.nashville.gov, on the MNN Roku channel and on Mayor John Cooper’s Facebook profile.”

The press release provided no details about what, specifically, Cooper plans to say.

Yes, Every Kid

In September, members of the Special Bombing Review Commission discussed rumors that the man accused of setting off a bomb on Second Avenue North on Christmas morning last year originally might have targeted Nashville’s Hermitage Hotel.

That man, Anthony Quinn Warner, died in an explosion that authorities accused him of setting off last year on Second Avenue around 6:30 a.m. on December 25. The explosion also damaged at least 41 businesses and collapsed one building.

Commission members discussed a rumor that Quinn parked his RV in front of the Hermitage Hotel in the city’s downtown district before hotel staff members asked him to leave.

Metro Police Lieutenant Steve Lewis told commission members that, in his opinion, Warner likely did park in front of the hotel that morning.

The Christmas morning explosion in downtown Nashville caused extensive damage and knocked out phone and internet communications throughout Middle Tennessee.

In the hours after the explosion, a video was posted on Twitter from what was apparently a recording of the bombing from a nearby security camera. Audio of a loudspeaker warning people to clear the area and “evacuate now” can be heard echoing in the street moments before the blast.

A large segment of Second Avenue was still closed off to the public as of last week.

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Chris Butler is an investigative journalist at The Tennessee Star. Follow Chris on Facebook. Email tips to [email protected].
Background Photo “Nashville Car Bombing” by Metro Nashville Police Department.

 

 

 

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4 Thoughts to “Nashville Mayor John Cooper to Discuss Future of Second Avenue in the Wake of Last Year’s Christmas Day Bombing”

  1. David

    Nothing to see here….Just clean up the FBI’s test run bombing and blame it on a fictitious boogie man from Antioch.

    1. John

      David, have some more Kool-Aid my friend…….

  2. David Blackwell RN, BSN, CCM

    Let’s wire it off and turn it into a Covid Camp!

  3. rick

    Maybe Commie Cooper, can raise property taxes again to fund his supposed fix for 2nd Avenue or maybe he wants to build a high rise for the homeless on 2nd Avenue. Comrade Cooper has done so much. I hope Cooper, the odd ball, does not laugh again during his comments regarding 2nd Avenue this year as he did during his Christmas Day national TV interview last year, he looked to be a bigger idiot than was thought possible. People from all over the country saw what an moron Nashville had as Mayor. What a loser!

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