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Authorities Investigate Early-Morning Explosion at Anti-Gay SoCal Church

LOS ANGELES (CBS/AP) -- The FBI and local police are investigating an explosion early Saturday at a Los Angeles-area church that had been the target of protests for its anti-LGBT message.

Officers responding around 4:30 a.m. initially thought a vandal had broken the windows of First Works Baptist Church in El Monte, said Lt. Christopher Cano of the city's police department. Officers then noticed smoke coming from inside, he told reporters at the scene.

El Monte Church Bombing
El Monte Police Chief David Reynoso, left, with another officer stand outside the First Works Baptist Church tagged with graffiti, after an explosion in El Monte, Calif., Jan. 23, 2021. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

"When our units arrived to the scene they found that the First Works Baptist Church was having some smoke come out of the windows," said Lt. Christopher Cano of the El Monte police department. "It appeared that the walls to the church had been vandalized as well as all the windows at first appeared to be smashed. Then we realized that the windows were not smashed, [and] that they had actually blown out from some type of explosion."

No injuries were reported, said FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller. Officials didn't immediately detail the extent of the damage inside the church east of downtown Los Angeles.

CONTINUING COVERAGE: CBS Los Angeles

FBI technicians are working with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department bomb squad and the El Monte Police Department during the initial investigation, Eimiller said.

She said it was premature to call the incident a hate crime, but "that's always going to be considered as a theory when a house of worship is attacked."

Calls to First Works Baptist Church were unanswered Saturday.

Protesters have repeatedly targeted the church headed by Pastor Bruce Mejia, who has condemned same-sex relationships.

A statement on it website says: "We believe that homosexuality is a sin and an abomination which God punishes with the death penalty."

Mejia's sermons and the church's stance were called hate speech during public comments at an El Monte City Council meeting, according to the Mercury News.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, a nonprofit advocacy organization specializing in civil rights litigation, listed the church on its 2019 watch list of "anti-LBGTQ hate groups."

An online petition by a group called Keep El Monte Friendly that calls for the church to be kicked out of the city had more than 14,000 signatures as of Saturday morning.

© Copyright 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report

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