Family of Colorado antisemitic attack suspect taken into ICE custody and has visas revoked, source saysNew Foto - Family of Colorado antisemitic attack suspect taken into ICE custody and has visas revoked, source says

The family of the Egyptian national charged with attempted murder after anantisemitic Molotov cocktail attackin Boulder, Colorado, has been taken into ICE custody, according to the Department of Homeland Security. The suspected attacker,Mohamed Soliman, has a wife and five children, all of whom are now facing expedited removal from the US, the White House said in a post on X. The six family members are being held in Florence, Colorado. As of late Tuesday, a law enforcement source said immigration officials planned to transfer the detained family members to an immigration detention facility in Texas as they await final expulsion proceedings. It remains unclear to which country the family might be deported, the source said. "THEY COULD BE DEPORTED AS EARLY AS TONIGHT," the White House's post continued. The State Department also revoked the visas ofSoliman'swife and children following the attack, according to a DHS official. DHS did not provide additional details on the expedited removal process. While the administration could move quickly to deport his family, generally, if someone enters on a visa, they can't be placed in fast-track deportation proceedings, known as expedited removal, which allows immigration authorities to remove an individual without a hearing before an immigration judge. "We're also investigating to what extent his family knew about this horrific attack, if they had any knowledge of it or if they provided support to it," DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said in a Tuesday social media post. The FBI identified Soliman as the lone suspect in the attack, in which he is accused of using a makeshift flamethrower and Molotov cocktails to set people on fire at an event in Boulder held in support of hostages in Gaza. Soliman told detectives after he was arrested that "no one" knew about his attack plans and that "he never talked to his wife or family about it," according to the affidavit for his arrest filed Sunday. "In light of yesterday's horrific attack, all terrorists, their family members, and terrorist sympathizers here on a visa should know that under the Trump Administration we will find you, revoke your visa, and deport you," Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on social media Monday. Soliman, who now faces federal hate crime and multiple state felony charges, appeared in state court Monday and is expected to appear in federal court on Friday. CNN has reached out to his attorney for comment. It is unclear if the family has retained legal counsel. In an interview with federal and local officials after the attack, Soliman said he "wanted to kill all Zionist people," and had been planning the attack for a year. A dozen people between the ages of 25 and 88 were injured in the attack in Boulder, many of whom were older adults. All of the victims are expected to survive, police said. A husband and wife were also severely burned, both still in the hospital in "serious condition," their rabbi, Marc Soloway, told CNN on Tuesday. A total of three victims were still hospitalized at the UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital as of Tuesday, a hospital spokesperson toldthe Associated Press. "I have a congregant in her 80s who is touch-and-go with horrific burns all over her body, and was lying on the ground in flames, bringing back horrendous memories of our own Jewish history," Soloway said. Brian Horwitz, 37, was at a nearby cafe when the attack began. He heard the screams and ran toward the suspect. "It was easily the most horrific thing I've ever seen in my life," Horwitz said. "There's someone who is outraged enough to go and attack these elderly people who are doing absolutely nothing to provoke it other than walk in silence and meet in a courtyard peacefully. It's unbelievable." Only one thing held Soliman back from attacking sooner, he told authorities: Waiting for his daughter to graduate high school. Soliman targeted the marchers, who gathered to take part in the global "Run for Their Lives" event to raise awareness for the 58 Israeli hostages still in Gaza. He was seeking revenge, he told detectives, as he felt the group didn't care about Palestinian hostages and that he "wanted to kill all Zionist people," according to the affidavit. Three days after Soliman's oldest daughter graduated with her high school diploma, he schemed his way to Boulder, leaving behind an iPhone with messages to his family hidden inside a desk drawer, according to the federal complaint. Soliman, who was born in Egypt but lived in Kuwait for 17 years, arrived in the United States in August 2022 as a non-immigrant visitor and in 2023 received a two-year work authorization that expired in March, a Homeland Security officialsaidMonday. He found brief work as an accountant after moving to Colorado Springs with his wife and children. Health care company Veros Health said in a statement that Soliman was an employee beginning in May 2023 but left just three months later. The company did not respond to questions about his departure. On the night of the attack, the FBI executed a search warrant on the family's Colorado Springs home. The family was "cooperative" during the search, the FBI said Monday. Soliman's wife brought her husband's iPhone to the Colorado Springs police following his arrest, according to the federal affidavit. The family's arrest threatens to derail what looked to be a promising academic career for Soliman's oldest daughter, who graduated days before her father's attack and had recently won a "Best and Brightest" scholarship from theColorado Springs Gazette. In her scholarship application, Habiba Soliman wrote that her family's move from Kuwait to the US provided a chance for her to "fulfill her dream" of pursuing medical school, according to the Gazette. She wrote about her work as a volunteer in a local hospital and about overcoming her initial difficulties after moving to the US two years ago. One of her teachers praised her for becoming fluent in English in that short period and said she soon emerged as a leader in the classroom. This story has been updated with additional information. CNN's John Miller, Josh Campbell, Lauren Mascarenhas, Curt Devine, Majlie de Puy Kamp, Mostafa Salem, Evan Perez and Karina Tsui contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Family of Colorado antisemitic attack suspect taken into ICE custody and has visas revoked, source says

Family of Colorado antisemitic attack suspect taken into ICE custody and has visas revoked, source says The family of the Egyptian national ...
Trump envoy says risk levels 'going way up' after Ukraine struck Russian bombersNew Foto - Trump envoy says risk levels 'going way up' after Ukraine struck Russian bombers

MOSCOW (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump's Ukraine envoy said the risk of escalation from the war in Ukraine was "going way up" after Ukrainian forces used drones to strike nuclear-capable bombers at several airbases deep inside Russia. Ukraine said it attacked airfields in Siberia and Russia's far north over the weekend, striking targets up to 4,300 km (2,670 miles) from the front lines of the conflict. "I'm telling you, the risk levels are going way up - I mean, what happened this weekend," Trump's envoy, Keith Kellogg, told Fox News. "People have to understand in the national security space: when you attack an opponent's part of their national survival system, which is their triad, the nuclear triad, that means your risk level goes up because you don't know what the other side is going to do. You're not sure." Russia and the United States together hold about 88% of all nuclear weapons. Each power has three main ways of attacking with nuclear warheads, known as the nuclear triad: strategic bombers, land-launched intercontinental ballistic missiles and submarine-launched ballistic missiles. Kellogg said the damage to the Russian bombers at the weekend was less important than the psychological impact on Russia and that he was particularly concerned by unconfirmed reports of a Ukrainian attack on a naval base in northern Russia. White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said on Tuesday that Trump had not been informed in advance of Ukraine's drone attacks on Russia's bombers. Russia and Ukraine held talks in Istanbul on Monday but made little headway towards ending the war that has raged since Moscow sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine more than three years ago. Kellogg said Ukraine had come up with a "very reasonable position" but Russia had come with a "very maximalist position", and that the aim now was to "try to bridge that". (Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

Trump envoy says risk levels 'going way up' after Ukraine struck Russian bombers

Trump envoy says risk levels 'going way up' after Ukraine struck Russian bombers MOSCOW (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump's...
Castro homers twice and Twins win 10-3, sending Athletics to 8th straight loss and 19th in 20 gamesNew Foto - Castro homers twice and Twins win 10-3, sending Athletics to 8th straight loss and 19th in 20 games

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Willi Castro hit a pair of solo homers and the Minnesota Twins scored four runs in both the sixth and seventh innings to hand the Athletics their eighth straight loss and 19th in their last 20 games, 10-3 on Tuesday night. Trevor Larnach and Castro homered and Byron Buxton added a two-run single in the sixth. Royce Lewis broke an 0-for-32 hitless streak with a bases-loaded two-run double in the seventh. Castro's homers gave him six this season while Larnach's was his ninth in a three-hit night. Buxton had a career-high five RBIs in a 10-4 victory over the Athletics on Monday. Pablo López (5-3) pitched five innings and gave up two runs on four hits, three walks while striking out four beforeleaving with right shoulder tightnesswhile warming before the sixth. After the game, manager Rocco Baldelli said the preliminary report is López has a lat strain. The A's have lost 19 of 20 games for fourth time in franchise history, according to Sportradar, and have been outscored by 95 runs over that time. Jacob Lopez (0-4) followed opener Grant Holman in the second and went 4 1/3 innings, giving up the three homers. He struck out a career-high nine. Tyler Soderstrom hit his first MLB triple. Key moment Lewis just missed his sixth career grand slam with his double off the left-center field wall but did snap an 0-for-32 hitless streak. Key stat The Athletics have given up 47 homers during their 1-19 plunge and 94 homers overall this season, most in the majors. Up next Minnesota's Zebby Matthews (0-1, 6.43 ERA) pitches against the Athletics' Jeffrey Springs (5-4, 4.72) on Wednesday. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Castro homers twice and Twins win 10-3, sending Athletics to 8th straight loss and 19th in 20 games

Castro homers twice and Twins win 10-3, sending Athletics to 8th straight loss and 19th in 20 games WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Willi Cas...
Kirby follows Earps in retiring from international soccer duty with EnglandNew Foto - Kirby follows Earps in retiring from international soccer duty with England

LONDON (AP) — Another member of England's European Championship-winning team has announced her retirement from international soccer, with midfielder Fran Kirby making her decision after missing out on selection for the team's title defense next month. The 31-year-old Kirby, who played 77 games for England and scored 19 goals, stepped down from national team duty less than a week aftergoalkeeper Mary Earpsdid the same. Kirby made her senior debut in August 2014 and represented England at four major tournaments, as well as featuring for Team GB at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021. She started in all of England's games at Euro 2022 on home soil, scoring two goals along the way as the Lionesses lifted their first major trophy with victory over Germany in the final at Wembley. Her last appearance for England came off the bench during its 6-0 win over Portugal on Friday. Sheannounced her decision on Instagramfollowing the team's2-1 loss to Spainon Tuesday. "After being in the England team since I was 21, it's time to close that chapter of my life," Kirby wrote. "I didn't ever want this day to come, but I cannot tell you how proud I am it happened. It's been the biggest honor to represent my country, one that I had only dreamt about as a young girl." Kirby was planning to retire from international duty after the upcoming Euros in Switzerland but has brought that forward after discovering she wouldn't be in Sarina Wiegman's squad for the tournament. "When I had the conversation with Sarina and you know, she laid her plans out for the Euros, and she told me I wasn't going, unless someone got injured, I knew it was the moment where I'd outstayed my welcome," Kirby told ESPN. "I don't want to take the opportunity away from someone who can learn and to then set them up for the future. And I just didn't want to be waiting around every day, of keeping that faint hope going just in case I was going to get a chance. I don't think that would've been fair on my head, either." ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Kirby follows Earps in retiring from international soccer duty with England

Kirby follows Earps in retiring from international soccer duty with England LONDON (AP) — Another member of England's European Champions...
A soccer mystery: Why mighty China fails at the world's biggest sportNew Foto - A soccer mystery: Why mighty China fails at the world's biggest sport

In April, Chinese President Xi Jinping visited a company that makes humanoid robots. There he floated an idea to fix the country's woeful men's soccer team. "Can we have robots join the team?" Xi was quoted as saying on the website of Zhiyuan Robotics. It might be too late. China will be out of World Cup qualifying if it fails to beat Indonesia on Thursday. Even a victory may only delay the departure. What's the problem? China has 1.4 billion people, the globe's second largest economy andwon 40 Olympic gold medalslast year in Paris to tie the United States. Why can't it find 11 elite men's soccer players? How soccer explains a bit of China The government touches every aspect of life in China. That top-down control has helped China become the largest manufacturer of everything from electronics to shoes to steel. It has tried to run soccer, but that rigid governance hasn't worked. "What soccer reflects is the social and political problems of China," Zhang Feng, a Chinese journalist and commentator, tells The Associated Press. "It's not a free society. It doesn't have the team-level trust that allows players to pass the ball to each other without worrying." Zhang argues that politics has stalled soccer's growth. And there's added pressure since Xi's a big fan and has promised to resuscitate the game at home. Soccer is a world language with its "own grammar," says Zhang, and China doesn't speak it. "In China, the more emphasis the leader places on soccer, the more nervous the society gets, the more power the bureaucrats get, and the more corrupt they become," Zhang adds. Xi Jinping's dream — or nightmare? After China defeated Thailand 2-1 in 2023, Xi joked with Srettha Thavisin, the Thai prime minister at the time. "I feel luck was a big part of it," Xi said. The consensus is clear. China has too few quality players at the grass roots, too much political interference from the Communist Party, and there'stoo much corruptionin the local game. Wang Xiaolei, another prominent Chinese commentator, suggests that soccer clashes with China's top-down governance and the emphasis on rote learning. "What are we best at? Dogma," Wang wrote in a blog last year. "But football cannot be dogmatic. What are we worst at? Inspiring ingenuity, and cultivating passion." Soccer is bigger than China The latest chapter in China's abysmal men's soccer history was a 7-0 loss last year to geopolitical rivalJapan. "The fact that this defeat can happen and people aren't that surprised — despite the historical animosity — just illustrates the problems facing football in China," says Cameron Wilson, a Scot who has worked in China for 20 years and written extensively about the game there. China has qualified for only one men's World Cup. That was 2002 when it went scoreless and lost all three matches. Soccer's governing body FIFA places China at No. 94 in its rankings — behind war-torn Syria and ahead of No. 95 Benin. For perspective:Icelandis the smallest country to reach the World Cup. Its latest population estimate is almost 400,000. The website Soccerway tracks global football and doesn't show a single Chinese player in a top European league. The national team's best player is forward Wu Lei, who played for three seasons in Spain's La Liga for Espanyol. The club's majority owner in Chinese. The2026 World Cupwill have a field of 48 teams, a big increase on the 32 in 2022, yet China still might not make it. China will be eliminated from qualification if it loses to Indonesia. Even if it wins, China must also beat Bahrain on June 10 to have any hope of advancing to Asia's next qualifying stage. An outsider views Chinese soccer Englishman Rowan Simons has spent almost 40 years in China and gained fame doing television commentary in Chinese on English Premier League matches. He also wrote the 2008 book "Bamboo Goalposts." China is benefiting from reforms over the last decade that placed soccer in schools. But Simons argues that soccer culture grows from volunteers, civil society and club organizations, none of which can flourish in China since they are possible challengers to the rule of the Communist Party. "In China at the age of 12 or 13, when kids go to middle school, it's known as the cliff," he says. "Parents may allow their kids to play sports when they're younger, but as soon as it comes to middle school the academic pressure is on — things like sport go by the wayside." To be fair, the Chinese women's team has done better than the men. China finished runner-up in the 1999 Women's World Cup but has faded as European teams have surged with built-in expertise from the men's game. Spain won the 2023 Women's World Cup. China was knocked out early, battered 6-1 by England in group play. China has been successful targeting Olympic sports, some of which are relatively obscure and rely on repetitive training more than creativity. Olympic team sports like soccer offer only one medal. So, like many countries, China focuses on sports with multiple medals. In China's case it'sdiving, table tennis and weightlifting. "For young people, there's a single value — testing well," says Zhang, the commentator and journalist. "China would be OK if playing soccer were only about bouncing the ball 1,000 times." The face of corruption Li Tie, the national team coach for about two years beginning in January 2020,was last year sentenced to 20 years in prisonfor bribery and match fixing. Other top administrators have also been accused of corruption. The graft also extended to the domestic Super League.Clubs spent millions — maybe billions — on foreign talentsbacked by many state-owned businesses and, before the collapse of the housing boom, real-estate developers. The poster child was Guangzhou Evergrande. The eight-time Super League champions, once coached byItalian Marcello Lippi, was expelled from the league anddisbanded earlier this year, unable to pay off its debts. Zhang says businessmen invested in professional soccer teams as a "political tribute" and cited Hui Ka-yan. The embattled real estate developer financed the Guangzhou Evergrande Football Club and used soccer to win favor from politicians. Property giantEvergrande has amassed debtsreported at $300 billion, reflective of China's battered property segment and the general health of the economy. "China's failure at the international level and corruption throughout the game, these are all factors that lead parents away from letting their kids get involved," says Simons, who founded a youth soccer club called China Club Football FC. "Parents look at what's going on and question if they want their kids to be involved. It's sad and frustrating." ___ Wade reported from Tokyo and Tang from Washington. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

A soccer mystery: Why mighty China fails at the world's biggest sport

A soccer mystery: Why mighty China fails at the world's biggest sport In April, Chinese President Xi Jinping visited a company that make...

 

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