logo
A ‘pro-mortalist' burned down an IVF clinic – there are fears the movement is on the rise

A ‘pro-mortalist' burned down an IVF clinic – there are fears the movement is on the rise

Telegraph21-05-2025
As a child, Guy Edward Bartkus enjoyed playing with smoke bombs and model rockets, and once managed to burn down his family home with a box of matches.
On Saturday, authorities believe the 25-year-old blew himself up with a car bomb in Palm Springs, California, outside a fertility clinic.
Following the blast, which killed Bartkus and injured four other people, investigators unearthed writing online and what appears to be an audio manifesto justifying the attack, in which he describes himself as a 'pro-mortalist'.
He appeared to subscribe to an ideology that humans should cease to exist to prevent future suffering, and that having children is fundamentally immoral because they could not consent to being born.
Richard Bartkus, 75, the father of the suspect, has said that he believed the voice on the recording belonged to his son and suggested he had been 'brainwashed' from spending time online.
Pro-mortalism is a 'twisted belief system that is anti-life', said Brian Levin, founder of the Centre for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino.
It primarily promotes suicide rather than terrorist attacks among its adherents, Mr Levin said, adding the 'philosophy itself is dangerous because it promotes the devaluation of life'.
He said it was one of a number of fringe movements on dark corners of the internet that is infecting young men.
Bartkus appeared to have posted a 30-minute recording online shortly before the attack, which begins with the words: 'I figured I would just make a recording explaining why I've decided to bomb an IVF building or clinic.'
'Basically, it just comes down to, I'm angry that I exist, and that's, you know, nobody got my consent to bring me here,' he continued, and compared the act of being born to raping an unconscious woman.
He compared life to 'slavery to a DNA molecule' and declared himself sickened by 'so much wasted suffering' in the world.
'When you see innocent creatures getting completely f—d by life, you know, I'm not just talking humans, but even animals, right? How the hell can you sit there and call that an intelligent design?' said the 25-year-old, who was a vegan and seemingly used the username 'IndictEvolution' online.
'Parents were the real killers by creating life'
Openly admitting he would cause 'death' and 'destruction' by bombing the fertility clinic, he declared in vitro fertilisation (IVF) was 'the epitome of pro-life ideology' and said: 'F— IVF, f— IVF clinics, and f— the people that work for them.'
'I'm only doing this because I feel like it's what I have to do to get people's f—ing attention and to let the world know, like, yes, I'm f—ing serious about this s—,' he continued.
Parents were 'the real killers' by creating life in the first place, he said, arguing: 'All the pro-mortalist is saying is like, hey, let's make it, let's make the death thing happen sooner rather than later in life, right? We're just changing the date at which it happened.'
The FBI said the explosion, which took place about 11am on Saturday morning, was the largest bombing ever in southern California.
Although the bombing heavily damaged the clinic, authorities managed to rescue the medical records and embryos of patients who were trying to conceive.
The online cult is an off-shoot of anti-natalism — the belief that it is always immoral to have children, Prof Levin said.
'There's a glorification of the dark side of the world and this blends into a nihilistic viewpoint,' he said, explaining that the group exists 'on the dark side of the dark web'.
Anti-natalists on online forums sought to distance themselves from pro-mortalism in the wake of the attack.
'We empathise with suffering, we don't seek to cause suffering. If you have pro-mortalist thoughts and beliefs, then kindly direct yourself out of this sub,' one account wrote on Reddit.
Prof Levin said the attack showed how the internet had allowed a range of extremist ideologies to proliferate.
'We look at multiple examples of young males, 17 to 25 ,who lash out against what they see as a degrading world. Sometimes it's done to stand for racial supremacy or nationalism,' he said.
'In this case though, he [Bartkus] boiled it down to the most central crux of his existence, which is that he had an unhappy and despaired life.
'It's a philosophy that says suicide is actually purposeful and accomplishing something beneficial for the world.'
Bartkus is said to have posted videos of homemade explosive devices on multiple social media accounts, a law enforcement source told ABC News.
An archived account shows videos dating back six years of what appeared to be tests of homemade explosive devices. YouTube has since deleted the channels because they are 'associated with the suspect'.
Richard Bartkus told The New York Times he had not spoken with his son in 10 years, and recalled him as enjoying tinkering with small model rockets and 'stink bombs' and 'smoke bombs'.
In September 2009, aged nine, he said he son was placed on juvenile probation after lighting the family home on fire while playing with matches
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Parents fury after police 'blunder' led to them losing the chance to locate their missing daughter, 12
Parents fury after police 'blunder' led to them losing the chance to locate their missing daughter, 12

Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Parents fury after police 'blunder' led to them losing the chance to locate their missing daughter, 12

The parents of a 12-year-old Ohio girl who went missing slammed police for failing to recognize her during a traffic stop days after she was reported missing. Khloe Dunbar went missing on July 16 near Columbus, leaving her mother Megan Dunn terrified for her safety and desperately launching an effort to find her. But in the week before Khloe was found safely, a bystander filmed a suspicious traffic stop in which police found the child but allowed her to stay with a group of adults. Dunn said that discovering the cops had come face-to-face with her missing daughter but let her go left her 'disgusted.' 'I'm sick to my stomach,' she told 11Alive. 'I have video footage of these officers, and they let that little 12-year-old that was reported missing go. It's not OK. None of this is OK.' Police admitted that not only did they allow Khloe to leave the traffic stop as a missing person, but they were not even aware she was in the footage until it was sent to them by the outlet. 'It wasn't until you sent us that cell phone video that we even knew about the traffic stop,' conceded Sgt. Joe Albert with Columbus police. 'We wish we had handled the traffic stop differently. We wish she had been returned to her parents.' In bodycam footage of the traffic stop, police were seen pulling three people from a Chevy Malibu, sitting a male driver and two women by the side of the road. They then asked Khloe her name and she gave a fake alias and claimed she was 15, but the cops instantly questioned this and she eventually gave her real name. But they did not recognize the name despite a missing persons alert being issued days before, and allowed her to leave with one of the adult women after arresting the male driver. Khloe was eventually found the next day thanks to the cell phone footage, which was circulated online after witness Daeja Rutland said she realized the girl was in the clip. Rutland said she filmed the traffic stop after police pulled over two women and a man from a black SUV. When she got home and went on social media, she said she saw a missing poster of Dunbar and her heart sank. 'I looked at that video one time and I knew it was her... I got on Facebook and the first thing I saw was that little girl's face. My heart stopped,' she said. Dunn said her daughter's safe return was not satisfying given the way the police handled the case, saying that she wants an apology from officials Dunn said she was infuriated by how close police were to her daughter, who she claimed had been 'close to a fentanyl overdose' at the time. '(She was) this close to being trafficked,' she said. 'And the police had her, no regard for any of it. It's negligence.' Khloe was eventually found the next day, six days after the initial missing person report was made. But Dunn said her daughter's safe return was not satisfying given the way the police handled the case, saying that she wants an apology from officials. 'I want to hear, "We failed you and your family,"' Dunn said. 'There was only a 24-hour window before she was found again but that doesn't matter. What matters is that it happened.' Columbus Police told 11Alive that they have launched an internal investigation into the incident. It is unclear if any arrests were made after Khloe was found, and Daily Mail has contacted Columbus Police for more information.

Tesla ordered to pay $243m over Autopilot deaths
Tesla ordered to pay $243m over Autopilot deaths

Telegraph

time22 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Tesla ordered to pay $243m over Autopilot deaths

Tesla has been ordered to pay $243m (£183m) in compensation after a jury ruled that its Autopilot technology was partly to blame for a fatal crash involving one of its cars. A Miami jury on Friday held that Elon Musk's company bore significant responsibility for the death of a young woman and serious injuries to her boyfriend because its technology had failed. They assigned blame even though a reckless driver of a Tesla Model S admitted he was distracted after dropping his mobile phone. He rammed into the couple, Naibel Benavides Leon and Dillon Angulo, who were standing next to their parked Chevrolet. 22-year-old Ms Benavides Leon died following the crash. Tesla has now been ordered to pay $43m in compensatory damages and $200m in punitive damages to Mr Angulo and the family of Ms Benavides Leon. The verdict is the latest setback for Mr Musk, who is under mounting pressure as a result of falling sales and share price at Tesla. The billionaire's ill-fated alliance with Donald Trump has done significant damage to the electric car company's brand image and critics say Mr Musk has lost his focus. Autopilot is a driver-assistance system that Tesla says is intended to reduce a driver's 'overall workload'. However, it has faced repeated investigations in the US over its safety record and has not been cleared for use on British roads. Dan O'Dowd, a road safety campaigner who has long questioned Tesla's technology, said: 'Today's ruling is a heavy blow to Elon Musk and Tesla.' The Miami decision ends a four-year long case that was remarkable not just in its outcome but in the fact it even made it to trial. Many similar cases against Tesla have been dismissed or settled by the company to avoid the spotlight of a trial. The trial itself was contentious. Lawyers acting for the victims claimed Tesla either hid or lost key evidence, including data and video recorded seconds before the accident. The plaintiffs hired a forensic data expert who dug it up key evidence. Presented with the findings, Tesla said it made a mistake and claimed the failure to present the evidence was an honest mistake. A Tesla spokesman said: 'Today's verdict is wrong and only works to set back automotive safety and jeopardize Tesla's and the entire industry's efforts to develop and implement life-saving technology. 'We plan to appeal given the substantial errors of law and irregularities at trial.'

Mom of woman, 19, murdered on first date issues jaw-dropping courtroom threat to arrogant killer as he's jailed for life
Mom of woman, 19, murdered on first date issues jaw-dropping courtroom threat to arrogant killer as he's jailed for life

Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Mom of woman, 19, murdered on first date issues jaw-dropping courtroom threat to arrogant killer as he's jailed for life

The heartbroken mother of a 19-year-old woman who was murdered on a first date told her daughter's killer during his sentencing that she will haunt him for eternity. 'You and your family will be held fully responsible for the rest of your lives,' Sheena Scarborough told Maxwell Anderson on Friday as he was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of Sade Robinson. 'You will be eternally haunted by myself, my ancestors... I know you can't sleep at night, they have already been at you.' Anderson, 34, was convicted in June of killing and dismembering college student Robinson during their first date last year in Milwaukee. Prosecutors said he cut up Robinson's body and dumped one of her legs near a playground. Parts of her body, including her head, were never found. 'Judge, I'm asking this demon be respectfully returned back to hell as soon as possible,' Scarborough added. Robinson's father, Carlos Robinson, suggested to the judge that someone dismember Anderson. 'Everything that he did should be done to him,' he said. 'No man should be able to live after what he did. That's just how I feel. I can't get past this. I can't.' Anderson maintained his innocence throughout the trial and the sentencing. 'I took this to trial without ever once trying to make a plea deal of any kind because I did not commit these crimes,' Anderson said on Friday. 'And so I plan to appeal my convictions, while I hope and pray that further investigations not only prove my innocence but find and deliver true justice.' Anderson and Robinson, a student at Milwaukee Area Technical College, first met at a bar in March 2024 a week before her death. Police said they then spent the late afternoon and early evening of April 1 drinking at two bars before heading back to Anderson's apartment. Photos on Anderson's phone showed Anderson groping Robinson as she lay face down on his couch. Prosecutors have argued she was incapacitated and couldn't resist. Surveillance video showed her car leaving his apartment early on the morning of April 2 and arriving at a park along the Lake Michigan shoreline. Prosecutors claimed that's where he cut her body into pieces. He later burned her car behind an abandoned building and took a bus home. Searchers discovered one of Robinson's legs in the park and her other leg and a foot near a playground close to where he burned the car. Within the car, despite 'extreme fire damage,' investigators identified the outfit Robinson had been wearing on the night of the date as well as part of an iPhone consistent with hers. A human torso and an arm believed to be Robinson's remains washed up on a beach in suburban South Milwaukee. Her head is still missing. First-degree intentional homicide in Wisconsin carries a mandatory life sentence. The only question for Anderson on Friday was whether the judge would allow him to seek parole. Anderson's attorney, Tony Cotton, asked the judge to make Anderson eligible for parole after 25 years. He argued that Anderson served in the US Navy and suffers from obvious mental health issues. Cotton acknowledged that Anderson has been convicted of multiple misdemeanor disorderly conduct counts in connection with domestic violence but they're not significant offenses compared to most homicide defendants. He added that he has concerns about Anderson's safety in prison. But judge Laura Crivello refused to offer Anderson a chance at parole. She dismissed Anderson's claims of innocence, saying his view of reality 'differs from the rest of the world.' Trailing off at times and shaking her head, she said he's irredeemable, called his crimes 'unconscionable' and likened the case to something out of a horror novel. As previously reported, before the gruesome murder, Anderson and Robinson watched the Netflix series Love, Death & Robots. The animated show's Season 2 finale, 'The Drowned Giant,' depicts the gruesome dismantling of a gigantic human body on a beach.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store