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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Paul Farrell,Gustaf Kilander and Oliver O'Connell

Palm Springs bombing that killed one was ‘intentional act of terrorism’ targeting fertility clinic

An explosion outside a California fertility clinic that left one dead and several injured was caused by a bomb, the mayor of Palm Springs has confirmed. It is now being investigated as a terrorist act.

At a press conference on Saturday evening, Akil Davis, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office, told reporters: “Make no mistake, this is an intentional act of terrorism. The FBI is investigating it as such. Our Joint Terrorism Task Force is here, working in lockstep with the Palm Springs Police Department, the ATF, and a whole host of agencies.”

Asked whether it could be domestic or international terrorism, Davis said: “As our investigation will unfold, we will determine if it's an international terrorism or domestic terrorism. No matter which one, the Joint Terrorism Task Force is the lead on this, and we will find that out.”

Davis described the explosion as “significant,” noting that it affected several blocks in all directions from the blast site, creating a wide debris field of over 250 yards.

The FBI’s Evidence Response Team is processing evidence and will be on site for a significant amount of time, with bomb technicians working on the post-blast scene as well to determine the origins of the blast.

“We are working to confirm the identity of the deceased, and we will provide that to you as soon as we can, but we are keeping that close hold in order to protect the integrity of the investigation,” said Davis.

The person who died is believed to be a suspect, law enforcement sources told ABC News. When asked at the press conference about reports that a witness had found a tripod and camera as if a livestream was planned, officials confirmed they had heard that report and would be investigating.

Firefighters in the city responded to the explosion at the American Reproductive Center, just before 11 a.m. local time. Mayor Ron DeHarte told The Los Angeles Times in a text that he could “confirm it was a bomb in or near a vehicle parked at the building. One deceased.”

Later, he told CNN that there was no indication yet on the identity or the motive of the bomber: “We don’t have the why or who yet, and that’s all to come. Certainly, our teams are on top of that. Time will get us those details.”

However, he said authorities do not believe there is any further danger to the community.

Describing the location of the explosion, DeHarte told the network, “It's in the Uptown Design District of Palm Springs. [The clinic is] right across the street from Desert Regional Medical Center. It's not part of the Medical Center campus, but it's on Indian Canyon, which is just one block east of Palm Canyon Drive that everybody is familiar with when they come to Palm Springs.”

Debris outside the American Reproductive Centers fertility clinic (AFP via Getty Images)

Speaking to the Palm Springs Post, Lt. William Hutchinson with the Palm Springs Police Department confirmed that a car was responsible for the explosion. The department also confirmed that one person has been killed.

A witness told the Post that he saw human remains in the street.

“In front of the building [the car] was blown clear across four lanes into the parking lot of [Desert Regional Medical Center],” the witness said. “I could see the back of the car still on fire and the rims. That was the only thing that distinguishes it as a car.”

An aerial view of the aftermath of the explosion (AP)
A police spokesperson called it an ‘intentional act of violence’ (AP)

American Reproductive Centers, a fertility clinic and IVF lab, is located at 1199 N Indian Canyon Drive, across the street from the Desert Regional Medical Center. A hospital spokesperson confirmed that the explosion did not take place inside the medical center.

It is the only clinic of its kind in the Coachella Valley. Authorities have warned the public to avoid the area.

The windows of surrounding businesses were blown out (AP)

Palm Springs resident Tamara Cash told The Desert Sun the explosion “was so loud it shook me. All I could hear was alarms going off in different buildings.”

Dr. Maher Abdallah, who runs the American Reproductive Centers fertility clinic where the explosion occurred, told The Associated Press in a phone interview that all of his staff were safe and accounted for.

The explosion damaged the practice’s office space, where it conducts consultations with patients, but left the IVF lab and all of the stored embryos there unharmed.

“I really have no clue what happened,” Abdallah said. “Thank God today happened to be a day that we have no patients.”

At least one person died, and at four were injured in the blast (AP)

Nima Tabrizi, 37, of Santa Monica, said he was inside a cannabis dispensary nearby when he felt a massive explosion.

“The building just shook, and we go outside and there’s massive cloud smoke,” Tabrizi said. “Crazy explosion. It felt like a bomb went off ... We went up to the scene, and we saw human remains.”

Pam Bondi, the U.S. attorney general, tweeted: “I have been briefed on the explosion at a fertility clinic in Palm Springs, California that took place today. Federal agents are on the ground now responding alongside local law enforcement.

“We are working to learn more, 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.”

Firefighters at the scene of the explosion on Saturday in Palm Springs (AP)

While there have been attacks on abortion clinics and people who work at them for many years, attacks on fertility clinics like the one in Palm Springs have been rarer.

Palm Springs is a city of roughly 45,000 people about a hundred miles east of Los Angeles, and has often been used as a vacation spot for the rich and famous. The resort city is situated in the Coachella Valley within the Colorado Desert.

The city’s population triples between November and March as it has become a prominent retirement and snowbird destination. Most of the snowbirds have been Canadians, but some have started boycotting the city amid President Donald Trump’s harsh policies and aggressive rhetoric against the US’s neighbor to the north.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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