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Daily Mail
12 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Palm Springs fertility clinic bombing suspect, 32, meets horrific and premature end in jail
The suspect arrested in connection to the bombing at a fertility clinic in Palm Springs, California has died in jail. Daniel Park, 32, was found unresponsive inside the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles Tuesday morning. He was pronounced dead at the hospital. His cause of death is unclear. Park, of Seattle, Washington, was accused of supplying 180lbs of explosives to Guy Edward Bartkus, the bomber who died in the May 17 explosion at the American Reproductive Centers. He was taken into custody at New York's JFK Airport by the FBI and Port Authority Police on June 3 following the disastrous bombing. Bartkus, the primary suspect and man accused of setting off the bomb, was killed in the explosion after a silver Ford Fusion sedan erupted. Earlier this month, FBI director Akil Davis said the agency discovered that Park shipped six packages of ammonium nitrate - a chemical compound found in bombs - from Washington State to Bartkus in California. Park was also 'in possession of a similar recipe' that was used in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, Davis said. The suspect was nabbed by the FBI and Port Authority Police at New York's airport after he was deported back to the US from Warsaw, Poland. He was a US citizen, though it is unclear if he has any connections to Poland, US District Attorney Bilal A Essayli said. Davis described both Park and Bartkus as members of the anti-natalist movement, a group that 'don't believe people should exist' and people should not continue to procreate. The FBI believes the two were conducting experiments in a garage in Twentynine Palms - a large US Marine Corps base that Bartkus lived in. At least five others were injured in the incident, which authorities called an 'intentional act of terrorism.' The bomb recipe that Park was in possession of was similar to that of the Oklahoma City bombing - where Timothy McVeigh, a former Army soldier and security guard, set off a powerful bomb inside a rented truck in front of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City. A total of 168 people were killed, including 19 children. Several hundred more injured. In his writings, IVF clinic bomber Bartkus allegedly said he was 'pro-mortalist', something he described as someone who intends to bring on their own death as soon as possible 'to prevent your future suffering, and, more importantly, the suffering your existence will cause to all the other sentient beings.' He also recorded a 30-minute-long audio clip explaining why he 'decided to bomb an IVF building, or clinic.' 'I figured I would just make a recording explaining why I've decided to bomb an IVF building, or clinic. Basically, it just comes down to I'm angry that I exist and that, you know, nobody got my consent to bring me here,' he said. Bartkus also said he was 'angry' that IVF clinics exist, adding: 'These are people who are having kids after they've sat there and thought about it. How much more stupid can it get?' 'These are people who are having kids after they've sat there and thought about it. How much more stupid can it get?' He is suspected of setting off a large vehicle-borne improvised explosive device outside of the clinic, which performs IVF treatments, egg collections and other procedures, according to his website. Authorities found an AK-47 and an AR-Style rifle, as well as ammunition next to the burnt vehicle, the LA Times reported. He allegedly tried to film the terror attack by setting up a tripod with a camera beforehand, but the file failed to upload to his website, according to BNO News. On the day of the attack, FBI officials raided his home and evacuated the neighborhood over fears it was a 'blast zone.' At the time, Davis said the agency was running the investigation, but did not specify if the raid was connected to the fatal explosion. Following the powerful explosion, Davis confirmed it was a terror attack. 'Make no mistake: This is an intentional act of terrorism,' Davis said during an evening news conference. Multiple witnesses reported hearing a loud boom, and dramatic videos shared on social media show the explosion shattered windows of a nearby liquor store. Dr. Maher Abdallah, who operates the American Reproductive Centers fertility clinic, confirmed to The Associated Press that his facility was among the properties damaged in the blast. He said all staff members were safe and accounted for. The explosion impacted the office area used for patient consultations but did not harm the IVF laboratory or any of the stored embryos. 'I really have no clue what happened,' Dr Abdallah said. 'Thank God today happened to be a day that we have no patients.' None of the facility's embryos were damaged in the attack.


CBS News
19-05-2025
- CBS News
Father of Palm Springs fertility clinic bombing suspect speaks out; "After Twentynine Palms he just changed"
The father of Guy Edward Bartkus is speaking out after news that his son is the person investigators believe to be the suspect in the bombing at a Palm Springs fertility clinic on Saturday. Richard Bartkus says that he hasn't spoken to his 25-year-old son in more than a decade and that he is not the person he remembers. "He tried to help people," Bartkus said of his son. "After Twentynine Palms he just changed." He was unaware that his son was a suspect in the massive investigation that sprawled across Southern California on Saturday, which is still ongoing at his son's home in Twentynine Palms. He was also unaware that his son is believed to be dead following the incident. "It didn't say anything about him dying and I read later that he died," Bartkus said while speaking with CBS News Los Angeles. Guy Edward Bartkus, the 25-year-old Twentynine Palms man who FBI investigators believe responsible for the bombing outside of a Palm Springs fertility clinic on Saturday, May 17, 2025. FBI FBI investigators say that Guy Bartkus packed his 2010 silver Ford Fusion with explosives before making the hour-long drive to Palm Springs, where they believe he intentionally parked outside of American Reproductive Centers, an IVF clinic. Investigators say that they're still digging through a series of Bartkus' online posts and writings, which appear to indicate anti-natalist beliefs, a view that people should not continue to have children. "We need the public's help in identifying gaps in our investigation," said Akil Davis, assistant director in charge of the FBI's Los Angeles field office in a press conference on Sunday. "We know where Mr. Bartkus was at about 6 a.m. We know the timeline of when he entered the city, but we need the public's help identifying where he traversed within the city before the explosion went off." Damage from the explosion outside of a Palm Springs fertility clinic on May 17, 2025. Getty Images As that investigation continues, Bartkus says that his son was fascinated with how things worked as a kid. Barktus also said that when his son was nine years old, he accidentally burned their family home down while trying a trick with matches but never noticed any red flags. "He would make a smoke bomb, stink bomb, kid things," his father said. "He didn't make anything dangerous. When I say bomb, it wasn't like a bomb bomb. It was like something you just throw on the ground and it pops." Bartkus says that bombing a building, what the FBI is now calling the largest in Southern California history, is something he never imagined his son would do. "I don't know what changes ... maybe a girl, maybe people he was hanging out with up there. It wasn't him. Before that, Guy was more for helping people," Bartkus said. Federal investigators say that they're handling the investigation as an international act of terrorism. They did not have a timeline for when the neighborhood surrounding Bartkus' Twentynine Palms home would be reopened as they continued to gather evidence.