Possible human remains found n

Image:Twitter@BizColombo

Possible human remains found near Nashville explosion site – police

The explosion remains a mystery, but Nashville Mayor John Cooper said the blast was caused by a “deliberate bomb.”

Possible human remains found n

Image:Twitter@BizColombo

Metro Nashville Police Department Chief John Drake said investigators found tissue near the blast site.

The tissue will be examined, he said, to determine whether they are human remains.

He could not say how close the tissue was to the site where the motor home exploded.

Communication outages

US telecom giant AT&T has meanwhile confirmed that one of its facilities was damaged in what authorities call an “intentional” blast in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, amid reports of mass communications outages and 911 services down across multiple states.

The telecoms company declined to say how widespread outages were but confirmed that one of its buildings, housing telephone exchange network equipment, was “affected” by the explosion, causing “some” service interruptions.

“We are in contact with law enforcement & working as quickly as possible to restore service for some customers in Nashville & surrounding areas. This is due to damage to our facilities from the explosion this morning,” the company said on Twitter.

Multiple law enforcement agencies across Tennessee, Kentucky, and Alabama reported their 911 systems were down following the blast, including Murfreesboro, Knox County, Muscle Shoals, and Madison County, according to local media.

The telecommunications issues in the aftermath of the blast also forced the Federal Aviation Administration to temporarily halt flights out of Nashville International Airport.

While police said the blast was clearly “intentional,” it remains unclear whether it had specifically targeted the AT&T infrastructure.

Besides damaging one of the company’s tech facilities, the explosion also occurred just about a block away from AT&T tower Nashville, known colloquially as the Batman Building.

The explosion rocked Nashville on Christmas morning, around 6:30am local time.

The blast was apparently preceded by a chilling pre-recorded message through a loudspeaker, which counted down to zero, while warning anyone within earshot to “evacuate now.”