What we know about the visa obtained by Egyptian man who injured a dozen people in ColoradoNew Foto - What we know about the visa obtained by Egyptian man who injured a dozen people in Colorado

The Egyptian man charged withinjuring a dozen peoplein Boulder, Colorado, in an attack ondemonstrators seeking the releaseof Israeli hostages is among hundreds of thousands of people known to overstay their visas each year in the United States. Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, was born in Egypt and moved three years ago to Colorado Springs, where he lived with his wife and five children, according to state court documents. He lived for 17 years in Kuwait. Soliman entered the country in August 2022 on a tourist visa that expired in February 2023, according to Tricia McLaughlin, spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security. She said Soliman filed for asylum in September 2022 and was granted a work authorization in March 2023, but that also expired. The department did not respond to requests for additional information. Federal immigration authorities took Soliman'swife and children into custodyTuesday. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said authorities were investigating whether his family knew about his plan. What is known about visa overstays? There were 565,155 visa overstays from October 2022 through September 2023 among visitors who arrived by plane or ship — more than the population of the metro areas of Reno, Nevada, or Chattanooga, Tennessee, according to Homeland Security'smost recent annual report. The total number of overstays is much larger but has not been quantified because it does not include how many people arrive and leave by land. The cost and technological hurdles to develop a checkout system at congested land crossings are enormous. The overstay rate for Egyptians on business or tourist visas was 4% in 2023, well below some of the biggest offenders such as Chad (49%), Laos (34%) and Sudan (26%). Historically, academics haveestimated that roughly 40%of people in the United States illegally stayed past their visas, but reliable numbers are difficult to come by. In 2016, Homeland Security published the number of overstays for the first time in at least two decades. How did Soliman obtain a work permit? Homeland Security did not say. But asylum seekers become eligible for work authorization 180 days after arrival. That correlates with him arriving in the country in August 2022 and obtaining the work permit in March 2023. Some critics say work permits create a huge magnet for asylum applications from people with weak cases. Immigration courts are backlogged with about 3.6 million cases, which can take years to resolve. The relative ease with which asylum seekers gain work permits has alsofueled some tensionswith people who have been in the country illegally for years or decades. Immigration court records are not public, and the status of Soliman's asylum case is unclear. Egyptians had an asylum grant rate of 72% during the 12-month period through September 2024, compared with 45% for all nationalities, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse.

What we know about the visa obtained by Egyptian man who injured a dozen people in Colorado

What we know about the visa obtained by Egyptian man who injured a dozen people in Colorado The Egyptian man charged withinjuring a dozen pe...
Justice Department drops lawsuit against Trump adviser Peter NavarroNew Foto - Justice Department drops lawsuit against Trump adviser Peter Navarro

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department is droppinga lawsuitthat it filed against White House trade adviser Peter Navarro, a case in which he was accused of using an unofficial email account for government work and wrongfully retaining presidential records during the firstTrumpadministration, according to a Tuesdaycourt filing. The joint filing by the Justice Department and an attorney for Navarro doesn't explain why they are abandoning a case that was filed in 2022, during President Joe Biden's term in office. The one-page filing says each side will bear their own fees and costs. The lawsuit accused Navarro of using at least one "non-official" email account — a ProtonMail account — to send and receive emails. The legal action comes just weeks after Navarro wasindicted on criminal chargesafterrefusing to cooperatewith acongressional investigationinto the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Navarro served afour-month prison sentenceafter being found guilty of misdemeanor charges. The civil cases alleges that by using the unofficial email account, Navarro failed to turn over presidential records to the National Archives and Records Administration. The government notified the court of the lawsuit's dismissal a day before U.S. Magistrate G. Michael Harvey was scheduled to preside over a status conference for the case. A Justice Department spokesperson declined to comment. A lawyer for Navarro didn't immediately respond to an email seeking comment. Navarroserved as a trade adviser during President Donald Trump's first term. A longtime critic of trade arrangements with China, he has been named senior counselor for trade and manufacturing for Trump's second administration.

Justice Department drops lawsuit against Trump adviser Peter Navarro

Justice Department drops lawsuit against Trump adviser Peter Navarro WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department is droppinga lawsuitthat it fi...
Donald and Melania Trump to attend Kennedy Center's opening night of Les MisérablesNew Foto - Donald and Melania Trump to attend Kennedy Center's opening night of Les Misérables

WASHINGTON ―President Donald Trumpand first ladyMelania Trumpare set to attend the opening-night showing of the musical Les Misérables at the Kennedy Center next week, making a rare public appearance in Washington's nightlife by visitingthe cultural institution Trump controversially took over. The White House confirmed the first couple's attendance to USA TODAY. But they won't be seeing all of the musical's cast members,some of whom planto sit out of the show that night, CNN and the Washington Post reported. Vice President JD Vanceand second lady Usha Vance will also attend the same showing of Les Misérables. The musical debuts at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts on June 11 and runs through July 13. "I love the songs, I love the play,"Trump told Fox Newson June 3 afterThe Atlantic first reportedon the plans to attend Les Misérables. "I think it's great ‒ we may extend it." More:JD Vance booed by crowd at Kennedy Center concert after Trump takeover of arts venue Les Misérables, set in early 19th-century France, tells the story of French peasant Jean Valjean, an ex-convict who struggles to find redemption after 19 years in prison. Trump is known to have "Do you hear the people sing? ‒ one of the musical's most famous songs about everyday people rising up against injustices ‒playing as he enters for campaign rallies. ForJD Vance, his attendance at the Kennedy Center comes after hewas loudly booed and jeeredwhile attending a National Symphony Orchestra performance at the center in March. Just weeks into his second White House term,Trump ousted the Kennedy Center's leadershipin February and named himself board chairman after complaining about "woke" programming and "drag shows" at the center. He named top ally Ric Grenell, his envoy for special missions, as the Kennedy Center's new president. But Trump's takeover has sparked a significant backlash. More:'I never liked 'Hamilton' very much,' President Trump says in visit to Kennedy Center Acts such as actress Issa Rae and the Broadway hit "Hamilton" canceled previously scheduled Kennedy Center performances in response to Trump's takeover. And the center has experienced a nosedive in yearly subscriptions. The Washington Post reported sales of subscriptionsfor the next season of programming at the Kenny Center have plummeted by 36%, down about $1.6 million in revenue from subscription sales to theater, dance, classical and other seasons of performance from the same point in 2014. Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump, Vance to attend Les Misérables opening night at Kennedy Center

Donald and Melania Trump to attend Kennedy Center's opening night of Les Misérables

Donald and Melania Trump to attend Kennedy Center's opening night of Les Misérables WASHINGTON ―President Donald Trumpand first ladyMela...
Advanced nuclear companies and others urge Senate to keep energy tax creditsNew Foto - Advanced nuclear companies and others urge Senate to keep energy tax credits

(Reuters) -Energy companies representing technologies that provide baseload, or stable and consistent power, on Tuesday urged U.S. Senate leadership to preserve clean energy tax credits that were effectively gutted by a Republican bill passed last month by the House of Representatives. WHY IT'S IMPORTANT Republicans including U.S. President Donald Trump have criticized clean energy tax credits for incentivizing intermittent renewable energy sources like wind and solar that vary depending on weather conditions. They say the nation needs more baseload power, which includes coal and natural gas, to serve soaring electricity needs tied to data centers and artificial intelligence. But in the letter sent on Tuesday, a group of nuclear, energy storage, geothermal and hydropower companies and organizations said they, too, need the subsidies to support their baseload technologies. KEY QUOTE "Baseload technologies rely on these credits to secure financing, plan multi-decade investments, and build the infrastructure needed for a reliable and resilient grid. Altering the availability, phase-out schedule, or transferability of these credits would jeopardize the firm capacity now in active development and undercut America's broader goals of energy security and productive investment," the companies said in the letter addressed to Senators John Thune, the Republican leader, Chuck Schumer, leader of the minority Democrats, Mike Crapo, the Republican chairman of the Senate finance committee, and Ron Wyden, the committee's top Democrat. The letter was signed by geothermal company Fervo Energy, storage firm Form Energy, nuclear technology companies Oklo and TerraPower, among others. It was also signed by several advocacy groups representing hydropower, geothermal and advanced nuclear energy. (Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Stephen Coates)

Advanced nuclear companies and others urge Senate to keep energy tax credits

Advanced nuclear companies and others urge Senate to keep energy tax credits (Reuters) -Energy companies representing technologies that prov...
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. "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. This story has been updated with additional information. CNN's John Miller, Josh Campbell, Lauren Mascarenhas, Curt Devine, Majlie de Puy Kamp, Mostafa Salem and Evan Perez 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 ...

 

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