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Police tactical teams maintain watch over the Boulder Jewish Festival on June 8, 2025 in Boulder, Colorado. (Chet Strange Getty Images)

Man who firebombed Boulder Israeli hostage march sentenced to life in prison

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JTA – The man charged with carrying out a deadly firebombing attack on a march for Israeli hostages in Boulder, Colorado, last year was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on Thursday after pleading guilty to murder and dozens of other charges. 

Mohamed Sabry Soliman, an Egyptian national who was arrested at the scene of the attack on the demonstrators in June last year, pleaded guilty to 101 charges, including 52 counts of attempted murder and one count of murder for the death of Karen Diamond, an 82-year-old victim of the attack who later died of her wounds. 

During the attack, Soliman shouted “free Palestine” and threw two molotov cocktails at the group, Run for Their Lives, injuring more than a dozen people. According to an earlier court filing, Soliman said that he had staged the attack, which prosecutors said he planned for a year, because he “wanted to kill all Zionist people and wished they were all dead”. 

Soliman has separately pleaded not guilty to federal hate crime charges, for which prosecutors could potentially seek the death penalty. 

“If I went back, I would not have done this as this is not according to the teaching of Islam,” Soliman said during the sentencing hearing, adding that he wanted federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty. “What I did came out of myself and only myself.” 

During his remarks, Soliman argued that he had not been driven by anti-Jewish animus. He later said that Zionism was “the enemy” and that it was his “right” to be against Israel. 

Chief District Judge Nancy W Salomone rejected Soliman’s arguments, telling him that his “choices were acts of terror, and they victimised an entire community,” according to The New York Times. 

“You chose to victimise these people because they were members of the Jewish community,” she said. 

In a statement read earlier in court by a prosecutor, Diamond’s sons, Andrew and Ethan Diamond, asked that Soliman not be allowed to see his family again “since he is responsible for our mother never seeing her family again”, according to the Associated Press. 

They said Diamond had suffered “indescribable pain” for more than three weeks before her death, adding that “in those weeks, we learned the full meaning of the expressions ‘living hell’ and ‘fate worse than death’.”

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