Multnomah Athletic Club damaged after explosives-packed car rams building; investigators eye former employee

 May 6, 2026

Portland police and federal bomb experts spent Saturday working a dangerous, “complex” scene after a car packed with explosive devices drove into the Multnomah Athletic Club and sparked a fire that left part of the facility heavily damaged.

The Oregonian/OregonLive reported that two law enforcement sources with direct knowledge of the situation described the driver as a disgruntled former employee and said the incident caused major damage before the driver died in the wreck.

That basic outline is clear. The identity of the driver, at least as of a Saturday afternoon press conference, was not.

Police Chief Bob Day said medical examiners were unable to identify the driver while crews continued working to defuse explosives. Separately, a law enforcement source told the outlet investigators believe the suspect was former employee Bruce Whitman.

What police said happened inside the building

Police described a deliberate path into the club’s interior. Officers said the driver entered the lobby, turned right, drove through turnstiles, passed a wall display of trophies and memorabilia, and headed toward 26 Founders, a restaurant inside the club, before setting off explosives.

Emergency responders extinguished the blaze around 3 a.m., but the danger did not end with the flames. As of Saturday afternoon, the vehicle remained inside the building while specialists worked the scene.

Sgt. Jim DeFrain, who heads the Metro Explosive Disposal Unit, said bomb technicians found a mix of devices, including some that had already detonated and others that did not fully go off.

He also framed the job in plain terms that most normal people understand immediately: slow, risky, and unforgiving.

DeFrain said, ???

“Dirty, dangerous, complex”, and not over

At the Saturday afternoon press conference, DeFrain emphasized the unusual complexity of the scene for local bomb technicians.

DeFrain said at the press conference that some devices detonated and some did not, describing the work as a technical process of finding, assessing, and making safe what remained inside the club.

That’s also why public statements were cautious: police were still dealing with live hazards in the building.

As readers who follow other high-risk investigations have seen in cases involving federal partners, such as our coverage of an FBI search tied to a Michigan synagogue attack suspect, the presence of multiple agencies usually means investigators believe the scene has real operational danger and broader investigative value.

Damage, closure, and a shaken community

The Multnomah Athletic Club’s general manager, Charles Leverton, emailed members that the facility was closed Saturday “until further notice.” He also asked members to avoid coming to the club or surrounding areas for the time being.

Leverton also wrote that “No MAC employees or members were injured,” a key fact in an incident that easily could have turned into something much worse.

Still, the physical damage appears severe. One law enforcement source described the ground floor as “completely destroyed” and said the incident caused “millions of dollars in damages.”

Leverton’s message struck a different note, less dramatic, but no less serious: “While we are still evaluating the full extent, the damage is significant but contained to a portion of the facility,” he wrote.

Those two descriptions may ultimately prove compatible. A “portion” of a large facility can still be catastrophically damaged, and costly.

Investigators focus on a former employee, but key questions remain

Investigators believe the suspect rented a black Nissan Rogue on Friday, police said. Early Saturday morning, a vehicle then went into the club and explosive devices were set off, with fire following.

Police executed a search warrant Saturday evening at a North Portland address listed as Whitman’s. Police confirmed the search was connected to what they described as “vandalism” at the Multnomah Athletic Club.

The club itself had tightened security in recent years after Whitman was arrested for verbally confronting members at their homes and in public, according to messages sent to members.

A neighbor, Ross Taylor, told The Oregonian/OregonLive that Whitman was known in the neighborhood for espousing conspiracy theories about the club, had drawn law enforcement attention, and appeared to be suffering from mental health issues.

None of that replaces the need for hard answers. Day said medical examiners could not identify the driver at the time of the press conference, and officials had not publicly laid out a final account of what detonated, what failed, and why.

What officials said about broader public safety

Day said police were confident the incident was confined to the club and that there were no other threats to the community.

That assurance matters, especially when explosive devices are involved and when investigators are still working inside a building hours after the initial fire is out.

But it also raises a basic public expectation: if authorities believe there is no wider threat, the public deserves a clear explanation, when it becomes safe and responsible to provide one, about how a vehicle packed with devices reached a major facility and made it into the lobby.

Americans have watched too many episodes, in too many places, where institutions talk big about safety right up until something goes wrong. The questions here are practical, not ideological, and they sound a lot like the questions raised in our coverage of an Oregon arrest involving an alleged plot and incendiary materials: What was known, what was missed, and what needs to change?

The institutional lesson Portland can’t dodge

This incident is not a culture-war parlor game. It’s a warning about what happens when personal grievance, security gaps, and dangerous materials collide in a major city.

The club has more than 21,000 members, and club materials list monthly dues of $422.34 for a family membership and $280.11 for an individual membership, not including initiation fees. That’s a lot of regular people paying for a place they expect to be safe and professionally managed.

And it’s a lot of people who now have to trust that investigators will deliver straight answers, not vague labels, about what happened and what steps will keep it from happening again.

As with other high-profile attacks on public or quasi-public spaces, whether ideological violence aimed at law enforcement, like the case we covered involving a July 4th assault on a Texas ICE detention center, or other incidents where responders arrive into chaos, the public’s patience runs out when officials can describe the danger but won’t explain the failures that made it possible.

Portland’s leaders and law enforcement agencies may not control every act of sabotage. But they do control whether they level with the public, follow the evidence, and fix the weaknesses this case is already exposing.

In a healthy civic culture, the first duty after a crisis is accountability, not spin.

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