Molotov Terrorist Wanted to Kill Jews, Now Faces DOJ Wrath: Charges Announced

A Colorado man accused of throwing Molotov cocktails at a vigil for Israeli hostages now faces federal hate crime charges. Prosecutors say the attack was premeditated and motivated by anti-Jewish hatred, while the defense claims it was politically driven.

Key Facts:

  • Mohamed Sabry Soliman allegedly attacked a Boulder vigil for Israeli hostages with Molotov cocktails in early June.
  • At least 15 people were injured in the attack.
  • Soliman had already been charged with 118 state counts, including 28 attempted murder charges.
  • The Justice Department added hate crime charges on Wednesday.
  • Prosecutors allege Soliman planned the attack for a year and wanted “to kill all Zionist people.”

The Rest of The Story:

Mohamed Sabry Soliman now faces hate crime charges from the U.S. Department of Justice for an attack earlier this month at a Boulder, Colorado, vigil for Israeli hostages held by Hamas.

Attendees were gathering in support of the hostages when Soliman reportedly launched Molotov cocktails into the crowd, injuring 15 people.

Colorado had already charged him with 118 criminal counts, including attempted murder, crimes of violence, assault, and unlawful use of incendiary weapons.

According to CNN, federal prosecutors say Soliman spent a year planning the attack and expressed a clear intent to “kill all Zionist people.”

His legal team argues the attack wasn’t driven by religious hatred but by political views.

“He did not target people because they were Jewish,” defense attorneys claim, disputing that the actions meet the legal threshold for a hate crime.

Commentary:

There are no two ways about it, Soliman planned the ambush. It was targeted and violent.

He didn’t attack a random group of political activists or protestors.

He zeroed in on a vigil for Jewish hostages.

He wasn’t shouting about a ceasefire or international diplomacy.

He was yelling “for Palestine” as he lit his homemade explosives and hurled them at civilians.

That’s not civil disobedience. That’s terrorism.

Soliman is an Egyptian Muslim who—according to prosecutors—spent an entire year plotting to “kill all Zionist people.”

That’s not vague political rhetoric. That’s genocidal hate, plain and simple.

When the ideology behind the action is that specific, the motive is clear.

Federal hate crime laws exist for a reason.

They’re not just about protecting identity groups—they’re about deterring those who weaponize ideology to justify mass violence.

Soliman crossed that line.

His defense team wants to cast this as political expression gone too far.

But that argument collapses under the weight of the facts.

Setting people on fire because you hate their ethnicity—or the country you assume they support—is not political activism.

It’s evil.

The Justice Department made the right call by filing hate crime charges.

Anything less would send the message that this kind of targeted terror is tolerable if you dress it up in foreign policy outrage.

In a nation founded on religious freedom and rule of law, there’s no room for ideological arsonists.

Soliman should be prosecuted to the fullest extent possible—and serve as a warning to anyone who thinks hate can be cloaked in the language of protest.

The Bottom Line:

Mohamed Soliman allegedly set out to harm Jews at a peaceful vigil and followed through with a violent, calculated attack.

The DOJ’s hate crime charges are warranted based on both his actions and his stated intent.

This case is a sobering reminder that anti-Semitic violence is real—and must be met with real consequences.

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