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FBI arrests alleged accomplice in Palm Springs fertility clinic bombing — and he shares suspected terrorist’s hatred

June 5, 2025
in News
FBI arrests alleged accomplice in Palm Springs fertility clinic bombing — and he shares suspected terrorist’s hatred
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Guy Edward Bartkus, the 25-year-old suspected terrorist killed in the May 17 bombing of a fertility clinic in Palm Springs, California,
allegedly left behind a nihilistic manifesto acknowledged by the FBI that equated human life to a disease gripping the planet, condemned religion, championed Satan over God, and called for a “war against pro-lifers.”

“Basically, I’m anti-life,” Bartkus
allegedly said in a 30-minute audio recording explaining why he apparently decided to bomb a fertility clinic. “And IVF is like kind of the epitome of pro-life ideology.”

The suspect appears to have been neither alone in his hatred for life nor alone in his plot to bomb the American Reproductive Centers in Palm Springs.

The FBI arrested Daniel Jongyon Park on Tuesday night at the John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York in connection with the bombing.

Park, a 32-year-old from Washington state, fled the country two days after the bombing. He was arrested by Polish authorities on May 30, despite an alleged attempt to “harm himself.” Attorney General Pam Bondi
reportedly helped ensure that he was deported to the United States on June 2, where he was charged with providing and attempting to provide material support to terrorists.

RELATED: Why a fatherless man bombed a fertility clinic — and the dark truth it exposes

“This defendant is charged with facilitating the horrific attack on a fertility center in California,” Bondi
said in a statement. “Bringing chaos and violence to a facility that exists to help women and mothers is a particularly cruel, disgusting crime that strikes at the very heart of our shared humanity.”

Bondi expressed gratitude to America’s “partners in Poland who helped get this man back to America.”

According to the Department of Justice, Park allegedly provided the suspected terrorist with the explosive precursor materials ultimately used in the attack, approximately 270 pounds of ammonium nitrate — 90 pounds of which he allegedly shipped just days before the Palm Springs bombing, which destroyed the clinic, damaged surrounding buildings, injured numerous people, and flung the bomber’s remains as far as the rooftop of a hotel a block away.

The suspect, who the FBI indicated filmed the attack and the events leading up to it, appears to have assembled the bomb at his home in Twentynine Palms, where federal agents
reportedly found massive quantities of explosive materials, including pentaerythritol tetranitrate — a chemical compound used in commercial detonators.

‘Would you press the button to end their suffering and speed up the process of extinction of life on Earth?’

After allegedly sending Bartkus the first shipment, Park — who allegedly made six separate online purchases totaling 275 pounds of ammonium nitrate between October 2022 and May 2025 — stayed at the suspected terrorist’s house from Jan. 25 to Feb 8., during which time he told people his name was “Steve.”

Citing records from an AI chat application, the DOJ indicated that Bartkus researched how to make powerful explosions using ammonium nitrate and fuel three days before Park came to visit him.

The
criminal complaint against Park indicates that federal agents discovered “explosive precursor chemicals and multiple recipes for explosives, including recipes for explosive mixtures containing ammonium nitrate and fuel” at his house. One of the recipes apparently corresponded with the explosive mixture used in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.

RELATED: New evidence could blow open the Oklahoma City bombing case

Bartkus’ family members allegedly told investigators that he and Park were “running experiments” in the suspected bomber’s detached garage, where FBI agents later discovered chemical precursors and laboratory equipment as well as packages listing Park’s home address.

The duo apparently bonded over their anti-natalism and their “pro-mortalism” — the
belief that non-existence is always preferable to life.

‘Those who aid terrorists can expect to feel the cold wrath of justice.’

The criminal complaint indicates that Park made numerous social media posts expressing such views, allegedly writing, for instance, in 2016 in response to the question, “What have you actually done to not have children?” that “a better question is what did you do to make other people not have children.”

In April 2025, Park allegedly wrote “yes” in response to the question, “If you had the technology to wipe out a tribe of people on an isolated island and no one would know about it after the tribe’s life was gone, would you press the button to end their suffering and speed up the process of extinction of life on Earth?”

U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli for the Central District of California said of Park’s arrest, “Domestic terrorism is evil and unacceptable. Those who aid terrorists can expect to feel the cold wrath of justice.”

Park could face up to 15 years in federal prison if convicted.

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The post FBI arrests alleged accomplice in Palm Springs fertility clinic bombing — and he shares suspected terrorist’s hatred appeared first on TheBlaze.

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