Just before 3 a.m. on Saturday, May 3, employees at the Multnomah Athletic Club in Portland, Oregon, reported that a vehicle had crashed into the building and caught fire. What responding officers found when they arrived made the scene considerably more serious than a typical crash call.
The driver was dead inside the vehicle. The car contained multiple incendiary devices, improvised explosive devices and propane tanks. Some had partially detonated. Others remained active. Portland Police Bureau officers secured the perimeter while the department’s explosive disposal unit moved in to assess what they were dealing with.
What investigators found at the scene
The explosive disposal unit deployed robots to evaluate the risk of additional detonations before personnel approached the vehicle directly. Officer Jim DeFrain, who leads the unit, told reporters the scene was unlike anything he had encountered in 13 years on the job. Portland Fire and Rescue managed the fire while law enforcement worked through the hazardous materials surrounding the crash site.
The identity of the driver had not been released as of Saturday morning. The medical examiner’s office opened an investigation, though officials noted that the continued presence of live explosive devices was complicating efforts to process the scene fully.
Portland Police Chief Bob Day addressed reporters and described the incident as isolated. He said the early evidence does not point toward domestic terrorism, though the investigation remains open and active. The FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are assisting with the inquiry.
The MAC and what its closure means for Portland
The Multnomah Athletic Club, known throughout Portland simply as the MAC, has operated as a fixture of the city’s social and athletic life for generations. The facility includes restaurants, swimming pools, fitness studios and a range of other amenities that have made it a gathering point for members across age groups and backgrounds. It is not just a gym. For many of its members, it functions as a community in the most literal sense.
Following the incident, the club closed indefinitely. General manager Charles Leverton spoke publicly about what the MAC represents beyond its physical structure, describing it as a community that would need to lean on itself during an uncertain period. He encouraged members to support one another and to extend that support to the law enforcement personnel working at the scene.
The closure leaves staff and members without a clear timeline for reopening. For a facility that runs on the rhythms of daily life, the indefinite nature of the shutdown compounds the shock of the incident itself.
How Portland is processing what happened
Saturday morning brought an unusual kind of stillness to the neighborhood surrounding the MAC. Residents and members who saw the news began sharing it quickly, and the reaction carried the specific weight that comes when a familiar, well-loved place becomes the site of something violent and frightening.
The MAC is not a symbolic target in the way that government buildings or transit infrastructure might be. It is a place people go to swim, eat, work out and see their neighbors. The fact that someone drove a vehicle loaded with explosives into it, for reasons that remain unclear, is the part Portland is sitting with right now.
What comes next for the investigation
With the FBI and ATF now involved alongside Portland police, the investigation has the resources and jurisdictional reach to pursue whatever the evidence produces. The driver’s identity, motive and any connections to broader networks or grievances will be central to what investigators work to establish in the days ahead.
For now, the MAC remains closed, the scene remains active and the community that calls the club home is waiting. Portland has weathered difficult moments before, and the response from members and neighbors in the hours following the incident suggested that the impulse to pull together was stronger than the impulse to panic. That distinction matters in the early hours of something this unsettling.

