Four days after the bombing on Christmas Day in downtown Nashville crippled cell service, internet and even key tools for law enforcement across a multi-state region, White County, Tennessee residents still struggled to get through to the county’s emergency communications center.
Though the center’s landlines worked and officials pushed out a non-emergency number via social media, the rural Tennessee county’s 911 Emergency Director Suzi Haston said she remained shocked their wireless services were still out after the bombing damaged an AT&T building more than 90 miles away… READ MORE

