When asked why the baseball stadium was such a big draw, owner Bobby Daugherty said, "Bodies. I sell cake. I need bodies through the door. So I knew [it] was kinda right in the middle of all the traffic, if you will."
“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 official
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.Gardeners also noted that planting things closer together and using the
proved to be a game-changer for their gardens, providing maximum nutrition to each unique plant. Adding mulch is a popular tip; they noted that it helps with better water retention and. "It's basic I know, but it really changed my garden's productivity and my frustration level," one person wrote.
One of the greatest lessons learned among gardeners on the Reddit thread was to focus on the light your garden gets throughout the day and how it changes each season. "There are areas in my garden that get morning light in the spring before the leaves come in (I'm in the northeast, so we have long winters), and for the longest time, I thought I'd never havebut discovered this area that's shady in the summer is actually pretty bright in early spring," one person wrote. "I've had gardens in three different homes now, and each one took me about a year to really figure out."