High-power explosives shatter and sheer steel, but look at all those structural steel girders, melted, wilted and impossibly distorted like wet noodles or sunlit taffy…or like metal hit with Directed Energy Weaponry. Evidence of DEW galore.
Formed 1980. Multi-million dollar compound, facilities involved with black-ops military contracts, explosives, demolitions, etc. 8 buildings, 1,500 acres. Building #6 was destroyed. The site is arranged with large blast-radius spacing amongst its building clusters.
Video of beam energy glints is shown in video further below. This mimics in some ways the ‘beam energy glints’ reported atop the Woolworth Building during the 911 takedown by DEW.
DEW Hallmarks
Grey / white mist, from molecular disassociation.
Zero crater.
Tremendous impact.
Toasted vehicles.
Ultra-loud, reports of explosion heard 50 miles distant. One comment left on video noted hearing and feeling explosion 14 miles distant.
Numeracy “19”.
Total mystery cause.
Nearby trees, telephone / power poles completely untouched.
ATF FBI investigating (sheriff interview 1:50 in).
Bent structural steel girders (2:10 in).
Crumpled metal (2:12 in).
“One of the most devastating scenes that I’ve seen in my career, and that’s 36 years.” 0:20 in.
Unknown certainty of deaths.
1:00 into https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nLBjykRzkQ


19 people are missing and feared dead after a deadly explosion at a military munitions plant near Bucksnort, Tennessee. The sheriff said it was one of the most devastating scenes he’s ever seen, referring to the 19 missing as “souls.” The explosion happened around 7:45 a.m. local time at Accurate Energetic Systems in Bucksnort, Tennessee, an unincorporated community about 60 miles southwest of Nashville. The cause of the blast was also still unknown. Multiple agencies from the local, state, and federal levels responded to the scene.





Building #6 is gone. 6:10 in.

GOOGLE MAP
https://www.google.com/maps/place/5891+TN-230,+McEwen,+TN+37101/@35.9236169,-87.6564993,881m
WIIPEDIA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_Accurate_Energetic_Systems_explosion


Deep-dive into what is publicly known so far about the explosion, the victims, and the business Accurate Energetic Systems in Bucksnort / Hickman County, Tennessee.
What is Accurate Energetic Systems (AES)?
- The Tennessee Emergency Management Agency (TEMA) describes Accurate Energetic Systems as a privately owned industrial facility that processes ammunition and explosives. They note the facility does not manufacture them. (Tennessee State Government)
- However, many media reports describe the business as an explosives/munitions plant (i.e. processing, manufacturing, storage, testing) supplying defense, aerospace, and commercial demolition markets. (AP News)
- The facility spans a large campus (≈ 1,300 acres) in the McEwen / Bucksnort area, with about eight buildings, labs, test areas, etc. (Tennessee Lookout)
- AES had held U.S. defense contracts, especially with the Army and Navy, for supplying explosive components (e.g. bulk explosives, small breaching charges, landmines) for military, commercial, and demolition applications. (CBS News)
- Its website, as cited in reporting, states it “rigorously adheres to the stringent security standards” required by the Department of Defense. (AP News)
- In 2019, AES had OSHA / TOSHA violations (online records show $7,200 in fines) with one serious violation related to sanitation and two categorized as “other” violations. (CBS News)
- The facility had previously experienced a serious explosion incident in April 2014 that killed one person and injured multiple others. (https://www.wsmv.com)
So in short: AES is (or was) a significant, sensitive facility in a rural area, with defense contracts and a history of explosive operations, though the state’s report distinguishes processing rather than manufacturing.
Explosion on October 10, 2025 — What Happened (So Far)
Here’s the timeline and known facts as of now:
Detail | Known Information |
---|---|
Date & Time | October 10, 2025, around 7:45 a.m. local time (Reuters) |
Location | At AES facility, Bucksnort / McEwen area, Hickman County, Tennessee (on the border of Hickman and Humphreys counties) (Tennessee Lookout) |
Extent of damage | One of the buildings was “completely obliterated.” Sheriff said: “There’s nothing to describe. It’s gone.” (CBS News) Debris scattered, adjacent vehicles damaged, fire and smoke, and risk of secondary explosions impeded immediate access. (AP News) |
Casualties / Missing | As of latest reports: • 19 people are missing / unaccounted for, feared dead. (Reuters) • Multiple confirmed fatalities, though exact figures not yet released. (AP News) • “Four or five” people were reported hospitalized / evacuated for injuries. (CBS News) • One worker initially reported missing was found safe at home. (https://www.wsmv.com) |
Response / Access | Emergency crews initially could not approach due to ongoing detonations. (AP News) FBI, ATF, TBI, and other federal/state agencies have been called in to investigate. (CBS News) The Tennessee Emergency Management Agency activated its operations center (Level 4 elevated) to support local jurisdictions. (Tennessee State Government) A missing persons hotline has been established: 1-800-TBI-FIND / 1-800-824-3463. (Tennessee State Government) A Family Assistance Center has been set up to support families of those impacted. (Tennessee State Government) Authorities say there’s no known continuing threat to public safety as of now. (Tennessee State Government) |
Because the structure was heavily damaged and second explosions were occurring, rescue and forensic work is ongoing and slow. (AP News)
The Victims & Human Impact
- The identities and full count of the victims and missing persons have not been officially released as of yet.
- Many families are in the process of being notified. (AP News)
- The community around Bucksnort / McEwen is deeply affected, in part because this is a rural area where such a catastrophic event is rare. (WPLN News)
- Some residents reported the explosion rattled homes miles away, waking them up or knocking items off shelves. (WPLN News)
- In 2014, the prior accident at the plant also caused grief in the community. The recurrence heightens local anxiety and may raise questions about safety oversight. (https://www.wsmv.com)
Open Questions, Risks, and Considerations
Because the situation is ongoing, many things remain uncertain:
- Cause: It is not yet known whether the explosion was due to a process error, equipment failure, human error, sabotage, or some other trigger. Investigations by ATF, FBI, TBI, and other agencies are underway. (CBS News)
- Exact casualty count: The number of fatalities versus missing, and whether any missing may yet survive, remains uncertain.
- Liability and oversight: Given the 2019 OSHA/TOSHA violations (though relatively modest fines) and the previous 2014 explosion, regulatory authorities will likely scrutinize AES’s safety practices, inspection records, maintenance logs, training, and compliance with explosive-handling standards.
- Environmental / public safety: Given the nature of the facility (explosives, munitions, testing), there could be risks of residual contamination, unexploded ordnance, or further detonations affecting nearby land or communities. Authorities say there’s no known continuing threat at present. (Tennessee State Government)
- Economic & social impact: This facility was a significant employer and part of the local industrial base. Disruption or permanent closure could have major economic consequences for the local area.
- Transparency and accountability: Whether AES or government agencies will issue timely, detailed reports (e.g. forensic analysis, root cause, safety deficiencies) remains to be seen.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXMp200wqTU
11 years ago in 20124 another blast, same site, different operating company. Also evidence of DEW Attack.








Video of Energy Glints in Mist mimic Woolworth Roof at WTC on 911
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8o_opKRqSPU
0:46 in, step thru the frames with comma- and period-keys.











Secondary explosions mentioned at 1:35 into https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YlMwY1v6Ru0

