
The Soliman case in Boulder is a vivid—and chilling—example of what happens when broken immigration policy meets lax enforcement and radical ideology.
On June 1, Mohamed Sabry Soliman, an Egyptian national who had overstayed his visa and obtained work authorization under the Biden administration, allegedly hurled a Molotov cocktail into a peaceful pro-Israel demonstration. Twelve people were injured. Miraculously, no one was killed.
But this story doesn’t end with Soliman.
Now, Soliman’s wife and five children have been taken into federal custody. Their visas have been revoked. According to senior officials at DHS and ICE, the family is being processed for expedited removal—a rapid deportation process that bypasses lengthy immigration court battles.
DHS Secretary Kristi Noem confirmed that her department is investigating whether the family had any prior knowledge of or involvement in the attack.
BREAKING: New video shows pro-Palestinian firebomber Mohamed Sabry Soliman declaring right before the attack in Colorado:
“Jihad is more beloved to me than my mother, wife, and children. Allah is greater than the Zionists and America.”
— Eyal Yakoby (@EYakoby) June 4, 2025
In other words, the Solimans aren’t just packing for a one-way ticket—they’re under a microscope.
And rightly so. The idea that individuals who enter this country on temporary visas can embed themselves in American life, only to launch or facilitate acts of terror, is deeply unsettling. It’s a reminder of why enforcement of immigration law isn’t some abstract political debate—it’s about public safety and national security.
Let’s be clear: Soliman had no legal right to remain in the United States after February 2023. Yet by September, he was filing asylum claims and receiving work authorization. Over a year later, he was firebombing a crowd of civilians.
This wasn’t just a breakdown in policy. It was a catastrophic failure of will.
On top of state-level charges—including 16 counts of attempted first-degree murder—Soliman now faces federal hate crime charges. His maximum potential sentence? 624 years behind bars.