During a brief court appearance on Monday, Soliman appeared via a video feed from the Boulder County Jail wearing an orange jumpsuit. He answered “yes” to some procedural questions from the judge but otherwise did not speak.
Soliman's attorney, public defender Kathryn Herold, said during the hearing she would reserve any arguments regarding his bond conditions until a future date. He was initially detained in lieu of a$10m (R179m) cash bail.
The suspect faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if found guilty on the federal hate crime charge because he was also charged with attempted-murder in state court.
The many attempted murder counts are punishable by up to 384 years in prison, Boulder County district attorney Michael Dougherty said.
Department of homeland security officials said Soliman had entered the US in August 2022 on a tourist visa, filed for asylum the next month and remained in the country after his visa expired in February 2023.
“There are millions of individuals like this who we are attempting to locate from the past administration who weren't properly screened and were allowed in,” Todd Lyons, acting director of US immigration and customs enforcement (ICE), said during a press conference in Boston. I
n a social media post, Trump called Sunday's attack “yet another example of why we must keep our Borders secure, and deport illegal, anti-American radicals from our homeland”.
Under former president Joe Biden, immigration and customs enforcement prioritised arrests of serious criminals and called for officers to consider humanitarian factors when detaining migrants.
Authorities had identified eight victims by late Sunday, four women and four men, 52 to 88 years of age. Two victims remained hospitalised on Monday. In addition, four more victims who were less seriously injured came forward on Monday.
Rabbi Yisroel Wilhelm, the Chabad director at the University of Colorado, Boulder, told CBS Colorado the 88-year-old victim was a Holocaust refugee who fled Europe.
Sunday's attack was not the first high-profile incident of mass violence in Boulder, a university town that attracts many young professionals and outdoor enthusiasts. In 2021, a gunman fatally shot 10 people, including an off-duty police officer, in a supermarket.
Reuters
Colorado firebomb suspect planned attack for a year, prosecutors say
An Egyptian national charged with tossing petrol bombs at a pro-Israeli rally in Boulder, Colorado, injuring a dozen people, planned his attack for a year and used Molotov cocktails instead of a gun because his noncitizen status blocked him from buying firearms, prosecutors said on Monday.
Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, told investigators he wanted to “kill all Zionist people” but had delayed committing the attack until after his daughter had graduated from high school, according to state and federal court documents charging him with attempted murder, assault and a federal hate crime.
Police and FBI affidavits quoted the suspect as saying he took firearms training to obtain a concealed carry permit but ended up using Molotov cocktails because of his immigration status. Soliman told investigators he had learnt how to make the fire bombs from YouTube.
Federal authorities said Soliman was in the country illegally, having overstayed a tourist visa and an expired work permit. President Donald Trump's administration officials immediately seized on Sunday's violence as an example of why they are cracking down on illegal immigration.
A police affidavit filed in support of Soliman's arrest warrant said he was born in Egypt, lived in Kuwait for 17 years and moved three years ago to Colorado Springs, about 161km south of Boulder, where he lived with his wife and five children.
“In light of the horrific attack, all terrorists, their family members and terrorist sympathisers here on a visa should know under the Trump administration we will find you, revoke your visa and deport you,” US secretary of state Marco Rubio said on X.
Federal and local authorities at an afternoon news conference in Boulder said Soliman had done nothing to draw law enforcement attention before Sunday's incident. He was believed to have acted alone, they said.
According to the Boulder police affidavit, Soliman had planned for a year to carry out the attack, which unfolded on the Pearl Street Mall, a popular pedestrian shopping district near the University of Colorado.
The affidavit said the suspect “threw two lit Molotov cocktails at individuals participating in the pro-Israel gathering”, yelling, “Free Palestine” as they ignited in the crowd. The victims, many of them elderly, were taking part in an event organised by Run for Their Lives, an organisation devoted to drawing attention to the hostages seized in the aftermath of Hamas' 2023 attack on Israel.
The attack was the latest act of violence aimed at Jewish Americans linked to outrage over Israel's escalating military offensive in Gaza. It came after the fatal shooting of two Israel embassy aides that took place outside Washington's Capital Jewish Museum last month.
US attorney-general Pam Bondi described the firebombing as an “anti-Semitic terror attack”.
Authorities said they found 16 petrol-filled Molotov cocktails near where the suspect was detained.
Police also found a fuel canister in his car parked nearby and a weed sprayer filled with petrol at the scene. The federal affidavit references a video posted on social media during the attack showing Soliman “shirtless, pacing back and forth while holding what appear to be Molotov cocktails”.
During a brief court appearance on Monday, Soliman appeared via a video feed from the Boulder County Jail wearing an orange jumpsuit. He answered “yes” to some procedural questions from the judge but otherwise did not speak.
Soliman's attorney, public defender Kathryn Herold, said during the hearing she would reserve any arguments regarding his bond conditions until a future date. He was initially detained in lieu of a$10m (R179m) cash bail.
The suspect faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if found guilty on the federal hate crime charge because he was also charged with attempted-murder in state court.
The many attempted murder counts are punishable by up to 384 years in prison, Boulder County district attorney Michael Dougherty said.
Department of homeland security officials said Soliman had entered the US in August 2022 on a tourist visa, filed for asylum the next month and remained in the country after his visa expired in February 2023.
“There are millions of individuals like this who we are attempting to locate from the past administration who weren't properly screened and were allowed in,” Todd Lyons, acting director of US immigration and customs enforcement (ICE), said during a press conference in Boston. I
n a social media post, Trump called Sunday's attack “yet another example of why we must keep our Borders secure, and deport illegal, anti-American radicals from our homeland”.
Under former president Joe Biden, immigration and customs enforcement prioritised arrests of serious criminals and called for officers to consider humanitarian factors when detaining migrants.
Authorities had identified eight victims by late Sunday, four women and four men, 52 to 88 years of age. Two victims remained hospitalised on Monday. In addition, four more victims who were less seriously injured came forward on Monday.
Rabbi Yisroel Wilhelm, the Chabad director at the University of Colorado, Boulder, told CBS Colorado the 88-year-old victim was a Holocaust refugee who fled Europe.
Sunday's attack was not the first high-profile incident of mass violence in Boulder, a university town that attracts many young professionals and outdoor enthusiasts. In 2021, a gunman fatally shot 10 people, including an off-duty police officer, in a supermarket.
Reuters
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