FBI, Palm Springs and fertility clinic
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Palm Springs merchants and tourists say Saturday's bombing was tragic, but they expect it to have little impact on the city's way of life.
The attack, though unsuccessful, delivered a seismic shock to patients who feared for the safety of their embryos. But a firefighter’s risky plan averted disaster.
Authorities told The Times they are looking into videos, audio files and other postings attributed to Guy Bartkus as they try to determine the attack motive.
A powerful car bomb aimed at a fertility clinic rocked. Here's what we know about who's responsible and where the investigation stands.
Investigators believe Guy Edward Bartkus, 25, acted alone in the explosion near a fertility clinic in Palm Springs, California, on May 17.
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Authorities are investigating what appear to be radical views that Guy Edward Bartkus expressed online in the months before Saturday’s attack.
YouTube accounts believed to belong to Palm Springs bombing suspect Guy Bartkus point to an interest in experimenting with homemade explosives and chemicals.
Bartkus is believed to be the person who detonated a bomb at the Palm Springs American Reproductive Center, which offers services like IVF, because he was aligned with the pro-mortalist and anti-natalist movements—the idea that humans should not continue to procreate.