It has been a month since trans terrorist Audrey Elizabeth Hale, killed six innocent Christians, including three children, at Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee.
Local officials have accused the FBI of stalling the release of Hale’s manifesto, which a Nashville council member recently described as a “blueprint on total destruction” due to its “astronomically dangerous” contents.
It’s unclear for whom exactly it would be dangerous.
Nashville Police told Fox News on Thursday that they will finally release Hale’s manifesto, which they recovered from her car following the attack on March 27.
According to a local news report, the Metro Nashville Police Department (MNPD) is currently reviewing the document in collaboration with the FBI for the purpose of public release.
“The investigation has advanced to the point that writings from the Covenant shooter are now being reviewed for public release,” MNPD’s Public Information Office told WZTV. “That process is underway and will take a little time.”
Fox News reported:
Nashville police confirmed they will release a manifesto they recovered from the car of Covenant School shooter Audrey Elizabeth Hale, a 28-year-old transgender former student who they say gunned down three 9-year-olds and three adults last month.
“The investigation has progressed to the point where the Covenant shooter’s writings are now being reviewed for public release,” the Metro Nashville Police Department told Fox News Digital. “This process is currently underway.”
A specific time frame for the release was not yet available, a police spokeswoman said.
Twenty journals, five laptops, a suicide note, and various other notes written by Hale were seized from the house she shared with her parents as well as two memoirs, five Covenant School yearbooks and seven cellphones, according to a search warrant.