FBI personnel and local police are investigating an attack in Boulder, Colorado that occurred at an event raising awareness for the Israeli hostages, Deputy Director of the FBI Dan Bongino said in a post on Twitter/X.
On Sunday afternoon, a man threw Molotov cocktails at participants of a weekly walking group that raises awareness for the hostages in Hamas captivity.
Local media reported that five people were burned. The injuries range “from very serious to more minor,” Boulder Police Chief Stephen Redfearn said, according to Reuters.
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One eyewitness said that one woman was so badly burned that she had to roll on the ground to put the fire out. Walla reported that children were among the five injured.
People are seen walking down the Pearl Street Mall, downtown Boulder, Colorado, US, August 28, 2021. (credit: SHUTTERSTOCK)
The suspect, an adult male, is now in custody, Reuters said.
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In videos of the attack circulated on social media, the suspect is seen walking and shouting “end Zionists” and “Palestine is free” while holding bottles containing clear liquids.
The video of an alleged terrorist from Boulder Colorado has emerged. He is heard saying “end Zionists” few times, also screams “Palestine is Free” at 28-29 second mark pic.twitter.com/uVNdVpcwlQ
Local authorities said that they could not confirm whether or not it was a terror attack at the time of publication.
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FBI personnel are on the scene in Boulder, Colorado, along with local law enforcement.We are investigating this incident as an act of terror, and targeted violence. All of the necessary assets will be dedicated to this investigation. If you have any investigative tips please…
“We are saddened and heartbroken,” Boulder’s Jewish Community said in a post on Facebook. “When events like this enter our own community, we are shaken. Our hope is that we come together for one another.”
“Our hearts go out to those who witnessed this horrible attack, and prayers for a speedy recovery to those who were injured,” the statement said.
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FBI, police investigating Boulder attack
FBI Director Kash Patel said on Sunday that the agency was aware of and fully investigating the potential terror attack.
While he did not provide further details, Patel said in a post on social media: “Our agents and local law enforcement are on the scene already, and we will share updates as more information becomes available.”
Police are asking the public to avoid the expanded evacuation area, they said on Twitter/X. So far, they have evacuated the 1200, 1300, and 1400 blocks of Pearl Street between Walnut and Pine, Colorado, according to local reports.
— Boulder Police Dept. (@boulderpolice) June 1, 2025
The weekly walking group, Run for Their Lives, noted that their walk was not a protest, but rather a peaceful gathering to raise awareness for the hostages in Gaza.
“This is not a protest; it is a peaceful walk to show solidarity with the hostages and their families, and a plea for their release,” the organization said in a statement, as reported by CBS News.
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Colorado governor, Israeli diplomats react
“Hate-filled acts of any kind are unacceptable,” Colorado Governor Jared Polis said in a Twitter/X post.
“My thoughts go out to the people who have been injured and impacted by this heinous act of terror,” he said.
I am closely monitoring the situation in Boulder, and my thoughts go out to the people who have been injured and impacted by this heinous act of terror. Hate-filled acts of any kind are unacceptable. While details emerge, the state works with local and federal law enforcement to…
The Israeli consulate in Los Angeles said that it was monitoring the situation and that it had contacted local law enforcement and the Boulder Jewish community.
Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said that the attack was caused by antisemitic tropes spread in the media.
“Shocked by the terrible antisemitic terror attack targeting Jews in Boulder, Colorado,” he wrote in a statement on X/Twitter.
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“This is pure Antisemitism, fueled by the blood libels spread in the media. I spoke with our Ambassador in the US and our Consul General in LA. I pray for those who were wounded in the attack.
Colorado Attorney-General Phil Weiser said that he believed that the attack was a hate crime because it targeted members of the Jewish community.
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“This attack appears to be a hate crime given the group that was targeted,” Colorado Attorney-General Phil Weiser said in a statement.
“People may have differing views about world events and the Israeli-Hamas conflict, but violence is never the answer to settling differences. Hate has no place in Colorado. We all have the right to peaceably assemble and the freedom to speak our views. But these violent acts—which are becoming more frequent, brazen and closer to home—must stop and those who commit these horrific acts must be fully held to account,” he said.
Jewish Federation proposes steps to Trump administration
“The attack in Boulder is another example of a wave of domestic terror aimed at the Jewish community. This must be the highest priority for the Trump Administration and Congress,” a statement from the Jewish Federations President and CEO Eric D Fingerhut said on Sunday.
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The statement outlined six steps that the organization believes the Trump administration should implement, including increasing funding for defense and security organizations that protect Jewish institutions, and aggressively prosecuting antisemitic hate crimes and violence.
As prosecutors attempted to paint a Colorado dentist as a calculated killer who poisoned his wife to pursue a new romantic life, the defense took a dramatically different route by portraying his wife of 23 years as emotionally manipulative and mentally unstable.
Dr. James Toliver Craig, 47, is charged with first-degree murder in the March 2023 death of his wife, Angela Craig, a 43-year-old mother of six. Her cause of death was determined to be lethal doses of cyanide and tetrahydrozoline.
In opening statements Tuesday in Colorado, defense attorney Ashley Whitham acknowledged the couple’s rocky 23-year marriage but described Angela not as a victim of betrayal, but as someone who was emotionally broken, deeply private and at times manipulative.
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“You’re going to hear her own daughter describe her that she was also manipulating words,” Whitham revealed to jurors Tuesday. “Again, that if she wanted to try to get something, she would be manipulative.”
COLORADO DENTIST’S ALLEGED INTERNET SEARCH HISTORY TAKES CENTER STAGE AS MURDER TRIAL BEGINS
James Craig tears up during opening arguments in his murder trial in Arapahoe District Court Tuesday, July 15, 2025, in Centennial, Colo. Craig is accused of murdering his wife.(Stephen Swofford/Denver Gazette via Pool)
The Colorado couple’s marital strife was laid bare in Tuesday’s opening remarks. Prosecutors pointed to his relationship with a Texas orthodontist, Dr. Karin Cain, as the motivation for the murder. Cain has not returned Fox News Digital’s requests for comment. The defense said the 47-year-old husband had extramarital affairs throughout the couple’s marriage.
“Karin Cain was just like the others. This wasn’t some new obsession,” Whitham said.
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Along with a series of affairs, Craig also allegedly used the website Seeking.com, advertising himself as “Jim and Waffles” and claiming a net worth of $10 million in search of “sugar babies.”
Whitham described Angela as an “extremely private” stay-at-home mom of six who, due to her deeply held Mormon faith, was reluctant to share the couple’s marital issues. She claimed Angela was isolated and someone who was “not about to tell people about her marital struggles” and who was “broken.”
Defense attorney Kelly Hyman delved into the dueling strategies as the high-stakes murder trial kicks off. She noted that the defense’s strategy to cast Angela as manipulative and unstable plays into their aims to create reasonable doubt and reframe the context.
“By doing so, the defendant implies that [he] wasn’t responsible,” she explained to Fox News Digital. “That could go to the heaty of the defense that Angela killed herself and that it was suicide.”
Ryan Brackley, a lawyer for the prosecution, delivers his opening arguments during the murder trial of James Craig in Arapahoe District Court Tuesday, July 15, 2025, in Centennial, Colo.(Stephen Swofford/Denver Gazette via Pool)
Ashley Whitham, a lawyer for the defense, delivers her opening arguments during a murder trial for James Craig in Arapahoe District Court Tuesday, July 15, 2025, in Centennial, Colo.(Stephen Swofford/Denver Gazette via Pool)
While prosecutors argued Tuesday that Craig’s alleged Google searches, chemical orders and romantic messages to his alleged mistress amount to premeditation, Hyman warned that speculative interpretation of digital evidence isn’t always a slam dunk.
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“A way to do this is to challenge admissibility and the reliability of the digital evidence. This can be done on cross-examination or through a defense witness to counter the digital forensic and timeline reconstruction,” she said.
The defense argued Tuesday that investigators operated with “tunnel vision” and failed to investigate other leads. The defense said Angela’s personal laptop was never seized or searched despite prosecutors showing images of her using it from her hospital bed to research symptoms.
SMALL-TOWN DENTIST FACING TRIAL FOR ALLEGEDLY POISONING WIFE’S PROTEIN SHAKE AMID SECRET AFFAIR
“The defense could argue that the unexamined laptop may contain information supporting an alternative theory of events or potentially pointing to another person and/or a different timeline,” Hyman said. “This omission may suggest an incomplete and/or biased investigation.”
Hyman also noted that the absence of direct physical evidence, such as cyanide residue on containers or packaging, could work to the defense’s advantage.
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“The absence of direct physical evidence like poison residue on the protein shake containers or the victim’s body presents a key argument for the defense to use,” she said.
Colorado dentist James Craig is accused of fatally poisoning his wife and the mother of his six kids, Angela Craig.(Facebook)
READ THE INCIDENT REPORT – APP USERS, CLICK HERE
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Investigators alleged in court documents obtained by Fox News Digital that, in the weeks before his wife’s hospitalization and death, Craig used a dental office computer to search for “undetectable poisons” and how to obtain them, later purchasing arsenic and cyanide by mail, “how many grams of pure arsenic will kill a human” and “is arsenic detectable in an autopsy?”
Alongside these online searches, investigators alleged Craig made YouTube queries such as “how to make poison” and “Top 5 Undetectable Poisons That Show No Signs of Foul Play.”
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Fox News Digital has reached out to James Craig’s lead attorney, Lisa Fine Moses, for comment.
Sarah Rumpf-Whitten is a U.S. Writer at Fox News Digital.
BOTTOM LINE: A game after shutting out the Vancouver Whitecaps 3-0, the Colorado Rapids play the Seattle Sounders.
The Sounders are 9-6-4 in conference matchups. The Sounders rank fifth in the Western Conference with 98 shots on goal, averaging 4.7 per game.
The Rapids are 7-8-4 against Western Conference opponents. The Rapids rank 10th in the league drawing 108 corner kicks, averaging 4.7 per game.
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Wednesday’s game is the second time these teams meet this season. The last meeting ended tied 1-1.
TOP PERFORMERS: Albert Rusnak has eight goals and four assists for the Sounders. Jesus Ferreira has scored three goals over the past 10 games.
Rafael Navarro has scored eight goals with one assist for the Rapids. Djordje Mihailovic has three goals and three assists over the last 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Sounders: 5-3-2, averaging 1.4 goals, 3.6 shots on goal and 4.5 corner kicks per game while allowing 1.5 goals per game.
Rapids: 4-5-1, averaging 1.2 goals, 3.4 shots on goal and 4.8 corner kicks per game while allowing 1.3 goals per game.
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NOT EXPECTED TO PLAY: Sounders: Stuart Russell Hawkins (injured), Yeimar Gomez Andrade (injured), Kim Kee-Hee (injured), Joao Paulo (injured), Paul Arriola (injured), Stefan Frei (injured).
Rapids: Alex Harris (injured), Wayne Frederick (injured).
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
From fresh water to hot pavement, here are a few things to keep in mind when it comes to dogs, heat and summer.
Five dog-friendly trails in or near Fort Collins, Colorado, offer various hiking experiences.
Options range from short loops to longer trails, some with water access for dogs.
The only thing better than hiking the many Fort Collins-area trails is doing it with your dog.
Here are five favorite dog-friendly trails in or near Fort Collins to check out.
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Dogs must be on a leash and though rare, rattlesnakes can be found on all of these trails, so stay on the trail and be vigilant. These are all multiuse trails, so make sure to have control of your dog.
Horsetooth Falls Loop
Where: Horsetooth Mountain Open Space. West of Horsetooth Reservoir
The hike: You have options. It’s an easy 1.1 miles one way on a nonpaved trail to the falls, which you and your dog will find refreshing after the sunny hike. Either head back the way you came or do the moderate 3.1-mile loop via the Spring Creek, Horsetooth Rock and South Ridge trails back to the parking lot. The trail to the falls can be crowded.
Fee: $10 for county resident daily permit.
Information: Visit the Larimer County website.
Want a preview? Check out this video from 2021:
See why Horsetooth Falls hike is the best in years
Abundant spring rain has the falls flowing, vistas vibrant green and the wildflowers blooming.
Miles Blumhardt, Fort Collins Coloradoan
Pineridge Natural Area
Where: On the western edge of Fort Collins. The main parking lot is on Larimer County Road 42C (approximate address is 2750 County Road 42C).
The hike: Your dog will enjoy splashing in Dixon Reservoir and its 1.8-mile, nonpaved loop. If you wish to venture farther, there are more soft surface trails found on the 9.6-mile Foothills Trail that connects Pineridge, Maxwell and Reservoir Ridge natural areas. There is little shade on this hike, so mornings and evenings are better options.
Fee: Free.
Hours: 5 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Information: Visit the Fort Collins Natural Areas web page for Pineridge Natural Area.
Lory State Park East/West Valley trails
Where: Just west of Horsetooth Reservoir, 708 Lodgepole Drive.
The hike: The easy, 2.2-mile East Valley Trail takes you on a nonpaved trail to the shores of Horsetooth Reservoir, where your dog can enjoy the water (but not at designated human swimming areas). You can either head back the same way or add the 2.3-mile, nonpaved West Valley Loop back for a more difficult route. No shade, so enjoy the water.
Fee: $10 daily vehicle pass.
Hours: 5 a.m. to sunset.
Information: Visit the Colorado Parks and Wildlife web page for Lory State Park.
Reservoir Ridge Natural Area
Where: Parking lots on Centennial Drive/Larimer County Road 23, the west end of Michaud Lane and off Overland Trail Road (at approximately 1425 Overland Trail Road).
The hike: About 5 miles of nonpaved trail takes you along the foothills with great views of Fort Collins. There is no water and little shade on this hike, so early morning and late evening are best. This trail connects to the 9.6-mile Foothills Trail.
Fee: Free.
Hours: 5 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Information: Visit the Fort Collins Natural Areas web page for Reservoir Ridge Natural Area.
Arapaho Bend Natural Area
Where: East side of Fort Collins near Interstate 25. Parking lots at the east end of Horsetooth Road, Strauss Cabin Road between Horsetooth Road and Harmony Road, and one at the Harmony Transfer Center.
The hike: If pressed for time, this is a good go-to. It includes a mix of 4 miles of paved and nonpaved trails that wind among ponds, Rigden Reservoir and the Poudre River, with some shade provided by large cottonwood trees.
Fee: Free.
Hours: 5 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Information: Visit the Fort Collins Natural Areas web page for Arapaho Bend Natural Area.