The man accused of launching an "antisemitic attack" that injured at least 12 protesters with a "makeshift flamethrower" and Molotov cocktails in downtown Boulder on Sunday had "no regrets" and wanted his targets to die, Colorado officials said.
Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, posed as a gardener to get closer to the group of Jewish protesters, police and prosecutors said at a news conference Monday as the city's Jewish community reels from the attack.
The city of Boulder said in a statement Monday night that it was a "targeted, antisemitic attack."
Authorities said eight of the victims, ranging in age from 52 to 88, were admitted to the hospital with burns. One is a Holocaust survivor, according to a local rabbi. None have been identified publicly.

At least four of the injured were hospitalized and later discharged. Two were airlifted to UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora, Rabbi Marc Soloway told NBC affiliate KUSA of Denver.
Soliman, an Egyptian national, has been arrested and charged with attempted first-degree murder after deliberation; attempted first-degree murder with extreme indifference; first-degree assault, including against an at-risk victim older than 70, and possession of an incendiary device. He remains in custody on a $10 million bond.
The suspect has also been federally charged with a hate crime for targeting a religious or ethnic group. If convicted on all the charges, he faces up to 192 years in prison.
Authorities say the victims were participating in a peaceful rally calling for the release of the remaining Israeli hostages taken by Hamas during its terrorist attack Oct. 7, 2023. The Boulder branch of the Run for Their Life, like similar offshoots across the country, has been demonstrating to raise awareness of the hostages’ plight every week.
Soliman shouted "Free Palestine" during the attack, according to a criminal complaint filed in federal district court.
"Mr. Soliman stated that he had been planning this attack for a year. And he acted because he hated what he called ‘the Zionist group,'" J. Bishop Grewell, the acting U.S. attorney for the district of Colorado, said in a news conference Monday.
When interviewed about the attack, Grewell said Soliman told police he "wanted them all to die."
"He had no regrets, and he would go back and do it again," Grewell said.

An affidavit filed in the U.S. District Court said Soliman found out about the Run for Their Lives group online and knew it planned to meet at 1 p.m. Sunday.
Boulder Police Chief Stephen Redfearn told NBC News that there’s no indication that the group requested a formal police presence.
He said that no officer was specifically assigned to the event but that the law enforcement response was swift and the suspect was taken into custody within minutes.
Redfearn said the attack was "shocking."
"It’s disgusting. Seeing this man throwing Molotov cocktails onto human beings is just disgusting," he said.
According to the criminal complaint and Michael Dougherty, district attorney for Boulder County, the attack could have been worse: While the suspect threw two Molotov cocktails into the crowd, police recovered 16 more from the scene. Soliman also had attempted to buy a firearm before the attack but was denied due to his immigration status, police said.


