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Terror in Boulder: Woman set on fire during pro-Israel hostage walk

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Quick Hit:

A suspected terrorist launched a violent, anti-Israel attack Sunday in Boulder, Colorado, setting a woman on fire and injuring five others during a peaceful event honoring Israeli hostages.

Key Details:

  • The attack occurred around 1:26 p.m. at the Pearl Street Mall during a weekly walk organized by ā€œRun For Their Lives,ā€ a group advocating for the release of Israeli hostages still held by Hamas.

  • Witnesses say the suspect, Mohamed Sabry Soliman, was waiting outside the courthouse with bottles of a clear liquid, which he ignited and threw at the group.

  • One elderly woman was engulfed in flames, and all six victims—aged 67 to 88—suffered burn injuries. At least two were medevaced, and one remains in critical condition.

Diving Deeper:

Sunday’s attack in Boulder is now being investigated as an act of terrorism, with the FBI and Department of Homeland SecurityĀ confirmingĀ that the suspect, Mohamed Sabry Soliman, targeted a peaceful pro-Israel gathering with the intent to cause harm.

The event, organized by ā€œRun For Their Lives,ā€ began at 1 p.m. and traced a route through Pearl Street before stopping near the downtown courthouse. That’s where SolimanĀ reportedlyĀ emerged with what appeared to be bottles filled with a flammable substance. Witnesses say he ignited the liquid and hurled it at participants, shouting phrases such as ā€œFree Palestineā€ and ā€œThey are killers! How many children you killed?ā€ One woman was seen rolling on the ground to extinguish flames consuming her body.

Boulder Police Chief Steve Redfearn said during a press conference that emergency calls began flooding 911 moments after the attack began. Officers arrived quickly and found several victims with serious burn wounds. Soliman was identified at the scene, taken into custody without resistance, and hospitalized with minor injuries.

FBI Denver Special Agent Mark Michalek confirmed that federal authorities are investigating the incident as a terror attack, stating, ā€œThis is a targeted act of violence…Sadly, attacks like this are becoming too common across the country.ā€ DHS Secretary Kristi Noem echoed that assessment Sunday evening,Ā callingĀ the attack a ā€œterrorist attackā€ and affirming the agency’s involvement in the investigation.

Colorado Governor Jared Polis condemned the attack and said he was ā€œclosely monitoringā€ the situation. ā€œMy thoughts go out to the people who have been injured and impacted by this heinous act of terror,ā€ heĀ wroteĀ on X. ā€œHate-filled acts of any kind are unacceptable.ā€

PhotosĀ circulatingĀ online showed a shirtless man holding bottles of liquid shortly before being detained. The Boulder Police Department has urged the public to avoid the area and has not released further details.

The attack comes less than two weeks after a deadly shooting outside the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C., where two Israeli Embassy staffers were killed by a suspect also shouting ā€œFree Palestine.ā€ The organization Combat AntisemitismĀ respondedĀ to both incidents by warning of a troubling surge in anti-Jewish violence and rhetoric.

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Crime

Mexican Cartels Expanding Operations in Canada, Using Indigenous Reserves as Factory Hubs

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With Factories on Six Nations Land, Mexican Cartels Are Using Canada to Smuggle Counterfeit Goods Into the U.S. and Mexico

ā€œProject Panda,ā€ a major Ontario gang taskforce takedown in May targeting a counterfeit tobacco factory on the Six Nations Reserve near Hamilton and Buffalo, exposes a long-ignored reality: Mexican cartel networks have deeply embedded themselves in Canadian territory near the U.S. border—and are expanding in tandem with Chinese state-linked crime partners, using Indigenous land for counterfeit production and cross-border smuggling.

This is no longer just a policing matter. It is a national security crisis—one that exploits Indigenous communities, land, and jurisdictional protections that have inadvertently shielded criminal networks now designated as terrorist threats. Worse still, the threat has long been known to Canadian, American, and Mexican authorities. Yet Ottawa has failed to act.

Stunningly, an explosive intelligence report released last year labeled Canada aĀ ā€œsafe zoneā€Ā for Chinese and Mexican cartel networks to traffic weapons, drugs, and counterfeit tobacco through Six Nations land. ā€œMexican authorities have also stated that Canada is responsible for 12% of all the lost tax revenue for the Mexican Government from illicit cigarettes,ā€ the report says, and alleges that ā€œcompanies established in Six Nations have introduced up to 500 million cigarettes a year illegally into Mexico.ā€

That same reportĀ saysĀ more than 73 illicit factories have operated over the past 20 years, linked to 173 organized crime groups, including Mexican and Chinese networks.

Heavily armed Ontario Provincial Police units, supported by multiple agencies, raided the factory and associated sites on May 1 and 7. The targets spanned Six Nations, Brantford, and Ancaster—territories sitting between Hamilton, Niagara Falls, and Buffalo. What they found was staggering: 1,360 pounds of illegal cannabis, 3.16 kilograms of psilocybin, 15 firearms, and large skids of counterfeit tobacco packaging, valued at over $3 million. The factory is surrounded by barbed fences and trailer trucks. One of the raids intercepted two vehicles leaving the site with 11.1 million contraband cigarettes worth another $2.8 million.

While Project Panda hasn’t, at least yet, addressed fentanyl on Six Nations land, a related investigation—Project Roll the Dice—carried out by Six Nations Police on May 2, 2025, did target fentanyl trafficking. Search warrants were executed at a Mississauga Road residence and vehicle on the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation. Police seized 58 grams of fentanyl, 17 grams of cocaine, Canadian currency, drug packaging materials, digital scales, and multiple cellphones.

Project Panda drew scant attention from Canadian media, with coverage limited to local outlets. ButĀ The Bureau’sĀ document analysis and interviews with law enforcement sources reveal a deeper crisis: Canada’s national security vulnerability runs through southern Ontario and Quebec—stretching from the Six Nations of the Grand River, into Brantford, along the St. Lawrence, and directly to the U.S. border. This corridor has become a protected staging ground for Chinese organized crime, long embedded with the Hells Angels, now operating in concert with Mexican cartels.

Though the factories operate on Indigenous land, Ontario policeĀ have madeĀ clear they are controlled by non-Indigenous organized crime syndicates.

ā€œThis investigation involved a tobacco manufacturing facility operated by members of a non-Indigenous criminal network who do not reside on the territory,ā€ Project Panda investigators stated, adding that tobacco sales directly fund organized crime networks. The profits do not benefit local communities.

Confidential sources toldĀ The BureauĀ that Mexican cartel operatives are behind the factories and reserve-based casinos. Their presence is enabled by jurisdictional grey zones, preferential tobacco tax exemptions, and a persistent political unwillingness in Ottawa to confront the threat.

Behind the Mexican cartels, as in Canada’s fentanyl superlab economy, loom Chinese Triads. Canadian intelligence has long warned of this dual-threat structure. Sources close to Project Panda confirm the violence is intensifying, with shootings and firebombings linked to cartel enforcement groups. Seizure evidence shows high-powered firearms and growing operational sophistication.

This isn’t a new threat. As early as 1997, the suppressedĀ SidewinderĀ intelligence report—later believed by its authors to have been buried by political actors in Ottawa—warned that Triads linked to the People’s Republic of China were trafficking weapons through reserves such as Six Nations. The report cited connections to Chinese military-run companies and descendants of top Communist Party leaders. ā€œSeveral large quantities of arms manufactured by Norinco have been confiscated on Indian reserves, especially those of the Mohawks,ā€ it stated.

In 2008, Parliamentary testimony from Imperial Tobacco Canada echoed similar concerns. MPs heard that approximately 150 criminal groups were exploiting Six Nations people and land. At the time, illegal cigarettes made up 22% of Canada’s tobacco market—over 30% in Ontario and Quebec. Of those, 93% were traced to First Nations reserves.

Conservative MP Dave MacKenzieĀ noted:Ā ā€œI do not see the aboriginal community as being the big villains in this whole picture. What we’re hearing now is that they’ve been used by organized crime. The Americans are saying terrorist organizations are using it to fund terrorist activity; I don’t think we have that evidence, but the Americans are saying that.ā€

A legitimate Six Nations tobacco plant owner—whose Grand River factory is located just hundreds of meters from the cartel-linked plant raided in 2025—described the surrounding area as infiltrated. ā€œIf you come to some reserves—for example, Six Nations—it looks like a war zone right now,ā€ the man testified in 2008. ā€œIt truly does not look like the Canada that we all want our First Nations kids growing up in.ā€

ā€œIt’s not a normal environment for a young person to grow up in, and if they have to work in a tobacco factory that’s unregulated, how does anybody know whether there are firearms and other things and activities in there? Nobody will be able to answer that.ā€

These warnings ignored for decades are now being validated by probes like Project Panda and new intelligence. In a recent interview, a senior U.S. government source said concerns over Mexican cartel expansion into Canada intensified after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau lifted visa requirements for Mexican nationals in 2016. The source said U.S. officials repeatedly raised cartel threats in high-level bilateral meetings, but Canadian officials downplayed the risks, frustrating joint law enforcement efforts and compounding intelligence blind spots.

This assessment aligns with a 2023Ā reportĀ from former U.S. State Department official David Luna which described Canada as a ā€œsafe zoneā€ for Chinese Triads and Mexican cartels.

According to the Criminal Intelligence Service of Canada, illegal tobacco costs governments over $12 billion in lost revenue. More than 83 contraband brands are distributed worldwide from Canada, with 73 illicit factories documented in the past two decades. Some estimates suggest illicit product accounts for 24% of Canada’s tobacco market. The agency confirms that cartel actors are smuggling drugs and weapons into Canada in exchange for cigarettes.

ā€œChinese criminals are involved in producing cigarettes on Indigenous reserves, saving money and benefiting from tax exemptions,ā€ Luna’s report states.

Research from the Mackinac Center shows that in New York—a high-tax state—53% of cigarettes are illicit. Many are sourced from Canada. U.S. DEA and ICE officials have traced duty-free cigarette flows to reserves in Ontario and Quebec, through smuggling chains that extend to Panama, Korea, and free trade zones in China.

Chinese Triads are also implicated in counterfeit production, exploiting Section 87 of the Indian Act, which exempts on-reserve goods from taxation. These groups arbitrage that legal gap, distributing low-cost cigarettes across Canada and into foreign markets.

This cross-border trade, concealed behind legal protections and legitimate Indigenous businesses, has become a central artery for cartel financing, narcotics, and arms.

There is no longer any plausible denial: the use of Canadian Indigenous lands by Mexican cartels and Chinese Triads is directly connected to North America’s fentanyl and trafficking crisis. Ottawa’s continued refusal to acknowledge and confront this system is indefensible.

Canada’s security and sovereignty depend on it—now more than ever.

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Break The Needle

B.C. doubles down on involuntary care despite underinvestment

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By Alexandra Keeler

B.C.’s push to replace coercive care with community models never took hold — and experts say province isn’t fixing that problem

Two decades ago, B.C. closed one of the last large mental institutions in the province. The institution, known as Riverview Hospital in Coquitlam, had at its peak housed nearly 5,000 patients across a sprawling campus.

There, patients with mental illnesses were subjected to a range of inhumane treatments, cityĀ recordsĀ show. These included coma therapy, induced seizures, lobotomies and electroshock therapy.

When the province transferred patients out of institutions like Riverview during the 1990s and early 2000s, it promised them access to community-based mental health care instead. But that system never materialized.

ā€œThere was not a sustained commitment to seeing [the deinstitutionalization process] through,ā€ said Julian Somers, a professor at Simon Fraser University who specializes in mental health, addiction and homelessness.

ā€œ[B.C.] did not put forward a clear vision of what we were trying to achieve and how we were going to get there. So we languished.ā€

Today, amid a sharp rise in involuntary hospitalizations, experts say B.C. risks repeating the mistakes of the past. The province is using coercive forms of care to treat individuals with mental health and substance use disorders, while failing to build community supports.

ā€œWe’re essentially doing the same thing we did with institutions,ā€ said Somers, who began his clinical career at Riverview Hospital in the 1980s.

ā€œ[We’re] creating a system that doesn’t actually help people and may make things worse.ā€

ECT machines and electrodes from the Riverview Hospital Artifact Collection. | City of Coquitlam

Riverview’s legacy

B.C.’s push for deinstitutionalization was driven by growing evidence that large psychiatric institutions were harmful, and that community-based care was more humane and cost effective.

Nationally, advances in antipsychotic medication, rising civil rights concerns and growing financial pressures were also spurring a shift away from institutional care.

A 2006 SenateĀ reportĀ showed community care could match institutional care in both effectiveness and cost — provided it was properly funded.

ā€œThere was sufficient evidence demonstrating that people with severe mental illness had better outcomes in community settings,ā€ said Somers.

Somers says people who stay long term in institutions can develop ā€œinstitutionalization syndrome,ā€ characterized by increased dependency, worse mental health outcomes and greater social decline.

At the time, B.C. was restructuring its health system, promising to replace institutions like Riverview with a regional network of mental health services.

The problem was, that network never fully materialized.

Marina Morrow, a professor at York University’s School of Health Policy and Management who tracked B.C.’s deinstitutionalization process, says the province placed patients in alternative care. But these providers were not always well-equipped to manage psychiatric patients.

ā€œNobody left Riverview directly to the street,ā€ Morrow said. ā€œBut some … might have ended up being homeless over time.ā€

A 2012Ā studyĀ led by Morrow found that older psychiatric Riverview patients who were relocated to remote regional facilities strained overburdened and ill-equipped staff, leading to poor patient outcomes.

Somers says B.C. abandoned its vision of a robust, community-based system.

ā€œWe allowed BC Housing to have responsibility for mental health and addiction housing,ā€ he said. ā€œAnd no one explained to BC Housing how they ought to best fulfill that responsibility.ā€

Somers says the province’s reliance on group housing was part of the problem. Group housing isolates residents from broader society, instead of integrating them into a community. A 2013Ā studyĀ by Somers shows people tend to have better outcomes if they get to live in ā€œscattered-site housing,ā€ where tenants live in diverse neighbourhoods while still receiving personalized support.

ā€œAll of us … are influenced substantially by where we live, what we do, and who we do things with,ā€ he said.

Somers says a greater investment in community care would have emphasized better housing, nutrition, education, work and social connection. ā€œThose are all way more important than medical care in terms of the health of the population,ā€ he said.

ā€œWe closed institutions having no [alternative] functioning model.ā€

Reinstitutionalization

Despite B.C.’s efforts to deinstitutionalize, the practice of institutionalizing certain patients never truly went away.

ā€œWe institutionalize way more people now than we ever did, even at peak Riverview population,ā€ said Laura Johnston, legal director at Health Justice, a B.C. non-profit focused on coercive health laws.

Between 2008 and 2018,Ā involuntary hospitalizationsĀ rose nearly 66 per cent, while voluntary admissions remained flat.

In the 2023-24 fiscal year, more than 25,000 individuals were involuntarily hospitalized at acute care facilities, down only slightly from 26,600 the previous year, according to B.C.’s health ministry. These admissions involved about 18,000 unique patients, indicating many individualsĀ were detained more than once.

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In September 2024, a string of high-profile attacks in Vancouver by individuals with histories of mental illness reignitedĀ public callsĀ to reopen Riverview Hospital.

That month, B.C. Premier David Eby pledged to furtherĀ expandĀ involuntary care. Currently, B.C. hasĀ 75 designated facilitiesĀ that can hold individuals admitted under theĀ Mental Health Act. The act permits individuals to be involuntarily detained if they have a mental disorder requiring treatment and are significantly impaired. These existing facilities host about 2,000 beds for involuntary patients.

Eby’s pledge was to add another 400 hospital-based mental health beds, and two new secure care facilities within correctional facilities.

Johnston, of Health Justice, says Eby’s announcement merely continues the same flawed approach. It ā€œ[ties] access to services with detention and an involuntary care approach, rather than investing in the voluntary, community-based services that we’re so sorely lacking in B.C.ā€

Kathryn Embacher, provincial executive director of adult mental health and substance use with BC Mental Health & Substance Use Services, says additional resources are needed to support those with complex needs.

ā€œWe continue to work with the provincial government to increase the services we are providing,ā€ Embacher said. ā€œHaving enough resources to serve the most seriously ill clients is important to provide access to all clients.ā€

ĪøÉ™qiŹ” ɫəwʔənəq leləm’ (the Red Fish Healing Centre for Mental Health and Addiction) is for clients with complex and concurrent mental health and substance use disorders. | BC Mental Health and Substance Use Services website

Inertia

If B.C. wants to avoid repeating the mistakes of its past, it needs to change its approach, sources say.

One concern Johnston has is withĀ Section 32Ā of theĀ Mental Health Act. LargelyĀ unchangedĀ since 1964, it grants broad powers to medical professionals to detain and control patients.

ā€œIt grants unchecked authority,ā€ she said.

DataĀ obtained by Health Justice show one in four involuntarily detained patients in B.C. is subjected to seclusion or restraint. And even this figure may understate the problem. B.C. only began reliably tracking its seclusion and restraint practices in 2020, and only collects data on the first three days of detention.

A B.C. health ministry spokesperson told Canadian Affairs that involuntary care is sometimes necessary when individuals in crisis pose a risk to themselves or others.

ā€œIt’s in these situations where a patient, who meets very specific criteria, may need to be held involuntarily under theĀ Mental Health Act,ā€ the spokesperson said.

But York University professor Morrow says those ā€œspecific criteriaā€ are applied far too broadly. ā€œWe have this huge hammer [involuntary care] that sees everything as a nail,ā€ she said. ā€œInvoluntary treatment was meant for rare, extreme cases. But that’s not how it’s being used today.ā€

Morrow advocates forĀ revivingĀ interdisciplinary care that brings psychiatry, psychology and primary care together in community-based settings. She pointed to several promising models, including Toronto’s Gerstein Crisis Centre, which provides community-based crisis services for those with mental health and substance use issues.

Somers sees Alberta’sĀ recovery-orientedĀ model as a potential blueprint. This model prioritizes live-in recovery communities that combine therapeutic support with job training and stable housing, and which permit residents to stay up to one year. Alberta has committed to building 11 such communities across the province.

ā€œThey provide people with respite,ā€ Somers said.

ā€œThey provide them with the opportunity to practice and gain confidence, waking up each day, going through each day without drugs, seeing other people do it, gaining confidence that they themselves can do it.ā€

Johnston advocates for safeguards on involuntary treatment.

ā€œThere’s nothing in our laws that compels the health system to ensure that they’re offering community-based or voluntary based services wherever possible, and that they are not using involuntary care approaches without exhausting other options,ā€ she said.

ā€œThere’s inertia in a system that’s operated this way for so long.ā€


This article was produced through the Breaking Needles Fellowship Program, which provided a grant toĀ Canadian Affairs, a digital media outlet, to fund journalism exploring addiction and crime in Canada. Articles produced through the Fellowship are co-published by Break The Needle and Canadian Affairs.

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