A suspect in the bombardment of a fertility clinic in California that was found dead in a federal detention center died this week for suicide, as shown in the records of the Los Angeles County Memper Office.
Daniel Park, 32, was found without responding to his cell at the Metropolitan Detention Center on Tuesday and declared dead in a hospital, said the United States Department of Justice.
The way of death listed by the office of the Forensic Physician on Thursday is suicide, and the cause is the trauma of the forceful force.
A spokesman for the foreign doctor’s office said they could not provide more details about how Park died, because the investigation of the forensic doctor is ongoing and a report is not finished.
The Federal Prison Office, which is the agency to apply the law that investigates Park’s death, did not immediately respond to a request for comments on Thursday night.
Park was arrested on June 3 for accusations that he supplied materials used by another man to make a car pump that was detonated outside a fertility clinic of the American reproductive centers on May 17. The bomber, Guy Edward Bartkus, died in the explosion.
Park had been imprisoned at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles after he was arrested in Poland, where he fled after the bombing, and flew back to the United States. He was accused of providing and trying to provide material support to terrorists.
The FBI called for bombing an act of terrorism. It is believed that Bartkus was motivated by an ideology of “antinatalism,” the authorities said. Antnatalism refers to the belief that no one should have children.
Park shared those opinions, said the Department of Justice, and sent 180 pounds of ammonium nitrate to Barkus and paid the shipment of additional 90 pounds before bombing.
Ammonium nitrate is a fertilizer that can be used in explosives. The substance was also used in the bombing of the city of Oklahoma of 1995, which attacked a federal building and killed 168 people.