NASHVILLE, Tennessee (WTVF) – A man who knew Christmas bomber Anthony Warner received a disturbing surprise in the mailbox on New Year’s Day when he received a package from the bomber.
The non-descriptive package was registered on Dec. 23, two days before investigators said Warner committed suicide in the bombing.
According to sources NewsChannel 5 investigates that Warner sent similar packages to other people.
The package, which contained at least nine typed pages and two inch Samsung memories, was immediately handed over to the FBI.
The envelope has no return address, but the digressions of pages inside left no doubt that it was from Warner.
“Hey, buddy,” the cover letter begins, “You’ll never believe what I found in the park.”
“The knowledge I’ve acquired is immeasurable. Now I understand everything and I mean everything, from who / what we really are to what the known universe really is.”
The cover letter was signed by “Julio,” a name friends of Warner say he often used when sending them emails.
A source explains NewsChannel 5 investigates that Warner also had a dog named Julio.
The letter urged the friend to watch some internet videos that he included in two Samsung memory drives.
On another page, Warner wrote about conspiracy theories between 11 and 11, ending with the statement “The lunar landing and 11-11 have so many anomalies that they are hard to count.”
Warner later wrote that “September 2011 was supposed to be the final game on the planet,” because that’s when he believed that aliens and UFOs began launching attacks on Earth.
He wrote that the media were covering up these attacks.
But Warner’s writings become even stranger when he wrote about reptiles and lizards that he believed controlled the earth and had altered human DNA.
“They put a switch on the human brain so we could walk between us and look human,” Warner wrote.
While Warner’s writings cover a variety of bizarre theories, he never mentions AT&T or anything else that seems to suggest a motive in the Nashville bombing.
Warner wrote extensively on “perception,” adding that “Everything is an illusion” and “there is no such thing as death.”
While NewChannel 5 believes that summarizing Warner’s letters will provide a better understanding of his mood, WTVF has made the decision not to publish them in full. We are trying to balance by shedding light on his mindset before the bombing without giving it unnecessary notoriety.