FBI calls deadly California fertility clinic bombing an ‘act of terrorism’

Published May 18, 2025
A police line is seen outside a damaged American Reproductive Centres fertility clinic after a bomb blast outside the building in Palm Springs, California, on May 17. — AFP
A police line is seen outside a damaged American Reproductive Centres fertility clinic after a bomb blast outside the building in Palm Springs, California, on May 17. — AFP
Debris is seen outside a damaged American Reproductive Centres fertility clinic after a bomb blast outside the building in Palm Springs, California, on May 17. — AFP
Debris is seen outside a damaged American Reproductive Centres fertility clinic after a bomb blast outside the building in Palm Springs, California, on May 17. — AFP
Two bomb squad officers walk near near the scene of a bomb blast which damaged a fertility clinic and left one person dead in Palm Springs, California, on May 17. — AFP
Two bomb squad officers walk near near the scene of a bomb blast which damaged a fertility clinic and left one person dead in Palm Springs, California, on May 17. — AFP

A bomb exploded on Saturday outside a California fertility clinic, killing one person in what the United States’ Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) labelled a terror attack.

The blast tore through downtown Palm Springs, ripping a hole in the clinic and blowing out the windows and doors of nearby buildings, an AFP journalist on the scene reported.

“Make no mistake, this is an intentional act of terrorism,” Akil Davis, the head of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office, told reporters near the site of the fatal explosion.

“This is probably one of the largest bombing investigations that we’ve had in southern California,” he added.

He confirmed that one person near the clinic at the time of the blast had been killed and that four others were wounded. Work was ongoing to identify the deceased, he added.

Asked whether the clinic was deliberately targeted, Davis answered: “We believe so, yes.”

The city’s mayor, Ron deHarte had earlier told AFP that investigators confirmed a bomb exploded in or near a vehicle outside the clinic.

Eyewitnesses told local media they had seen human remains near the American Reproductive Centres clinic, with aerial footage of the scene showing the building’s roof had collapsed.

Debris for ‘several blocks’

The charred remnants of a vehicle lay in a parking lot, some distance from the apparent epicentre of the explosion.

Debris was blown straight through the building and scattered across the road, while the roofs of a number of nearby buildings had been damaged, indicating the intense force of the blast.

Davis of the FBI described the explosion as “significant” and said debris had been thrown more than two hundred yards (180 meters) from the scene, but declined to comment further on the characteristics of the bomb.

The local ABC affiliate, which cited an unnamed law enforcement source, said the person who died was a suspect in the blast.

Davis told reporters that though the FBI was working to identify the deceased, “we are keeping that close hold in order to protect the integrity of the investigation”.

A statement posted on social media by the clinic said no staff had been hurt, and that its lab — “including all eggs, embryos, and reproductive materials — remains fully secure and undamaged.”

It said that “a vehicle exploded in the parking lot near our building.”

Reproductive care, including abortion and fertility services, remains controversial in the United States, where some conservatives believe the procedures should be outlawed for religious reasons.

Violence against clinics providing such services is rare, but not unheard of.

‘Unforgivable’

President Donald Trump’s Attorney General Pam Bondi said federal agents were working to determine exactly what had happened.

“But let me be clear: the Trump administration understands that women and mothers are the heartbeat of America. Violence against a fertility clinic is unforgivable,” she said in a statement on social media.

People living near the clinic reported feeling the shaking from the blast throughout the city.

Matt Spencer, who lives in a nearby apartment complex, told the Palm Springs Post he ran outside as soon as he heard the blast, and was confronted with the sight of the burned-out car and what appeared to be a body in the middle of the road.

“In front of the building [the car] was blown clear across four lanes into the parking lot of [Desert Regional Medical Centre],” he told the paper.

“I could see the back of the car still on fire, and the rims, that was the only thing that distinguished it as a car.”

The Centre for Reproductive Rights, a global advocacy group, described the bombing as “horrific” and “unconscionable.”

“The history of violence against reproductive health centres is why clinics need protections and patients must feel safe,” its president, Nancy Northup, said in a statement.

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