FBI Calls Calif. Fertility Clinic Bombing 'Intentional Act of Terrorism'

May 18, 2025
According to authorities, a 26-year-old suspect was the only fatality in an explosion outside a Palm Springs fertility clinic that injured at least four people and could be felt over 2 miles away.

Numerous law enforcement agencies were on scene, including Palm Springs police, the FBI and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Investigators, bomb technicians and an evidence response team from the FBI were being deployed, the agency said in a statement on X.

By mid-afternoon, emergency officials had blocked off roads near the blast and white police trucks were stationed in front of the building. Authorities encouraged residents to leave any potential evidence in place and contact law enforcement.

One witness told the Desert Sun newspaper that he saw body parts and car parts when he walked past the clinic five minutes after the blast.

American Reproductive Centers is “Coachella Valley’s first and only full-service fertility center and IVF lab,” led by board-certified Dr. Maher A. Abdallah, according to its website.

The site says that the clinic has helped more than 2,000 families become parents and highlights its work with LGBTQ+ families. The clinic has operated in the Coachella Valley since 2009 after moving from Orange County, and has been in its current location since 2013, according to the Desert Sun.

Abdallah told the Associated Press in a phone interview Saturday that all of his staff were safe and accounted for.

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

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, Abdallah told the wire service.

The clinic referred to the incident as a “vehicle explosion” in a statement posted on Facebook. It said it would be open and fully operational on Monday.

“This moment has shaken us — but it has not stopped us,” the statement said. “We will continue to serve with strength, love, and the hope that brings new life into the world.”

The clinic posted a photo of the blast’s aftermath that showed the building’s roof caved in, debris flowing into the streets and smoke billowing from inside.

Tim Prendergast, co-owner at the gallery Christopher Anthony Ltd., was about two blocks away from the explosion site at his business. He first felt the shock wave hit the building and thought it was the start of an earthquake.

“But of course, once I felt, heard the explosion, then I knew it wasn’t an earthquake,” he said.

He ran down the street to the explosion site, following a black cloud of smoke, and arrived there in a few minutes. He saw a vehicle on fire and the medical building engulfed in flames. There were multiple people walking around the area in a daze. Some were bloodied but able to stand.

Then he came across body parts in the street.

“I was on Palm Canyon, and I saw the upper torso of a full body,” he said as his voice broke. “There were a lot of body parts, but they were all radiating away from the explosion of the car.”

There were pieces of the car and other debris fanning out from the explosion, along with insulation floating in the air, he said.

“I also noticed the hundreds and thousands of pieces of car parts radiating in every direction from the car circular pattern that was only interrupted by the back facade of the American Reproductive Center,” he added.

He worried the bombing was an act of domestic terrorism targeting a clinic that served the LGBTQ+ community.

“I’m horrified. I’m completely shattered,” he said.

“I think the fear in this town has risen to an unbelievable level for the gay community,” he said. “I think people are very terrified right now. I can see it on people’s faces.”

Former patient Staci Franklin said she was floored by the news of the incident.

“All he’s doing is giving women hope to have babies,” she said of Abdallah, whose clinic helped her get pregnant with her daughter, now 16.

Franklin said she and her husband spent the hours after the explosion debating possible motives, speculating about a disgruntled patient or an extremist from the far fringe of the antiabortion movement, who might have sought to destroy embryos to “make a statement.”

“If that was their motivation, I’m glad they failed,” she said.

Former American Reproductive Centers patient Jaclyn Ferber Calonne was at a baby shower when she started receiving text messages about the explosion outside the fertility clinic.

As a new mother to an infant, she said she immediately thought about the people whose eggs or embryos could have been endangered or damaged in the blast. She also thought about the clinic staff who had cared for her and her husband while they were undergoing IVF.

She said she had never seen protesters outside the clinic. Especially in a city that welcomes and celebrates diversity, she said it had never crossed her mind that the facility could be a target of violence.

“When you’re going through fertility challenges, there is so much that is out of your control, and the last thing on your mind is, ‘Oh my gosh, what if my fertility clinic blows up?’” she said. “That’s not something you should have to worry about on top of all the other things that you can’t control.”

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