Tangle - The attack in Boulder, Colorado.
Episode Date: June 3, 2025In Boulder, Colorado on Sunday, a man attacked members of a Jewish community group advocating for the release of hostages in Gaza. The suspect, identified as Mohamed Sabry Soliman, reportedl...y used a makeshift flamethrower and threw incendiary devices into the crowd, injuring 12 people. Witnesses reported that the suspect shouted “Free Palestine!” during the attack, and police found over a dozen unlit Molotov cocktails in Soliman’s vicinity after his arrest. Soliman is now in custody facinghate crime, murder, and assault charges among others, and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director Kash Patel said the incident is being investigated as a “targeted terror attack.”Ad-free podcasts are here!Many listeners have been asking for an ad-free version of this podcast that they could subscribe to — and we finally launched it. You can go to ReadTangle.com to sign up!You can read today's podcast here, our “Under the Radar” story here and today’s “Have a nice day” story here.Take the survey: Do you think recent attacks on Jews in the U.S. are motivated by antisemitism? Let us know!Disagree? That's okay. My opinion is just one of many. Write in and let us know why, and we'll consider publishing your feedback.You can subscribe to Tangle by clicking here or drop something in our tip jar by clicking here. Our Executive Editor and Founder is Isaac Saul. Our Executive Producer is Jon Lall.This podcast was written by Isaac Saul and Ari Weitzman, and edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75.Our newsletter is edited by Managing Editor Ari Weitzman, Senior Editor Will Kaback, Hunter Casperson, Kendall White, Bailey Saul, and Audrey Moorehead. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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["Tangle"]
From executive producer Isaac Saul, this is Tangle.
["Tangle"] is Tangle. Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening, and welcome to the Tangle podcast, the place
where you get views from across the political spectrum, some independent thinking, and a
little bit of my take.
I'm your host, Isaac Saul, and on today's episode, we're going to be talking about the attack in Boulder on a group of members from a Jewish community group that were protesting for the hostages in Israel.
We're going to talk about exactly what happened, share some views from the left and the right, and then my take.
I'm going to send it over to John to break down today's main story, and I'll be back after what the left and the right are saying.
Thanks Isaac and welcome everybody.
Here are your quick hits for today.
First up, White House special envoy Steve Wittkopf reportedly presented a proposal to
Iran that would curtail low-level uranium enrichment for a limited period of time.
However, President Donald Trump later reiterated that he would not allow Iran to enrich uranium
in any deal.
Separately, Iran said it would reject the latest U.S. proposal, which an Iranian diplomat
called a non-starter.
2.
The Justice Department asked the Supreme Court to allow it to proceed with laying off thousands
of federal workers while legal challenges to their firings play out.
Separately, the Supreme Court declined to hear cases challenging separate state bans
on AR-15-style rifles and high-capacity magazines.
3.
Poland elected Karol Nawrowski, a conservative historian, as its next president in a runoff
against liberal candidate Rafael Cheskowski,
Warsaw's mayor.
Separately Lee Jae Myung, the former head of South Korea's Liberal Democratic Party,
appears likely to become the country's next president, with exit polling showing him defeating
conservative candidate and former Labor Minister Kim Moon Soo.
Number 4.
President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are reportedly planning to speak
this week amid heightened tensions over trade.
The Trump administration has claimed China is delaying its renewed exports of critical
minerals to the U.S., and the Chinese government has criticized the U.S. for issuing a warning
against using Chinese computer chips.
And number five, job openings in the U. the US increased from an estimated 7.2 million in March to
7.39 million in April, 67 to 88 years old.
Regardless of anybody's views on global politics or the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, this
kind of act of terrorism, act of violence is completely unacceptable.
We condemn it.
I know that the suspect has been arrested.
I hope he's prosecuted to the full extent of the law
This is a hateful act and there's no place for this and I think there's you know
The only other appropriate thing to say is obviously we hope that those who were attacked recover
And I know that some are some are facing difficult situations with their burns in Boulder, Colorado on Sunday
A man attacked members of a Jewish community group advocating
for the release of hostages in Gaza.
The suspect, identified as Mohammed Sabri Soliman, reportedly used a makeshift flamethrower
and threw incendiary devices into the crowd, injuring 12 people.
Witnesses reported that the suspect shouted, free Palestine, during the attack, and police found over a dozen unlit Molotov cocktails in Soliman's vicinity after his arrest.
Soliman is now in custody facing hate crime, murder, and assault charges, among others,
and Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Kash Patel said the incident is being investigated
as a targeted terror attack.
Run for Their Lives, whose members were targeted in the attack, organizes weekly walks in communities
across the world to raise awareness for hostages taken by Hamas during the October 7, 2023
attacks in Israel.
A spokesperson for the organization said the local chapter had gathered in Boulder every
week since the fall of 2023.
Those injured in Sunday's attack were between the ages of 52 and 88 and included an elderly
Holocaust survivor.
Suleiman, the suspected attacker, is an Egyptian national who was in the United States illegally.
He arrived in the US in 2022 on a non-immigrant visa that permitted him to stay in the country
through February 2, 2023, but he did not leave when his visa expired.
He was granted a work authorization in March 2023, which ran through March 2025, but again
remained in the country.
Law enforcement officials said he had no previous significant contact with the police.
According to an FBI affidavit, Soliman confessed to the attack after he was taken into custody
and told police he would do it again, expressing a desire to kill all Zionist people.
Soliman also said he deliberately targeted Run for Their Lives, which he described as
a Zionist group, and planned the attack for over a year.
A witness reported that the suspect withdrew from the scene after the initial attack, then
re-emerged and threw a Molotov cocktail toward the crowd, appearing
to catch himself on fire in the process. Law enforcement said they found papers with the
words Israel, Palestine, and U.S. aid written on them inside his car, but the FBI has not found
evidence that Soleiman was linked to a terrorist group or network. President Donald Trump linked
former President Joe Biden's immigration policies to the attack,
writing on Truth Social,
The suspect came in through Biden's ridiculous open border policy, which has hurt our country
so badly.
This is yet another example of why we must keep our borders secure and deport illegal
anti-American radicals from our homeland.
White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller also questioned why Soleiman had been granted a work permit to remain in the country after overstaying his visa.
The attack follows two other high-profile violent incidents targeting Jewish and pro-Israel
Americans in recent months. In April, a man set Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's
residents on fire while the governor and his family were sleeping inside. The suspect told law enforcement that he targeted Shapiro because of his stance on Palestine.
Separately on May 21, a man shot and killed two Israeli embassy staffers outside an event
at the Capitol Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C., after which he shouted,
Free, free Palestine, while being taken into custody.
Today, we'll break down what we know about the attack in Boulder with views from the
right and the left, and then Isaac's tape.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
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All right, first up, let's start with some agreement.
Both sides condemn the attack.
Righters on the right and left also link recent attacks on Jewish Americans to rising anti-Semitism
worldwide.
And now let's move on to what the right is saying.
The right views the attack as a natural consequence of the anti-Semitism imbued in the anti-Israel
movement.
Some say the attack also highlights the failures of Biden's immigration policies.
Others worry that more incidents like this are still to come.
In City Journal, Charles Fain-Lehman wrote, this is what an entafada looks like.
Soleiman's assault is the third high-profile anti-Israel and anti-Semitic terror attack
in the U.S. in recent months.
It follows the double murder outside of the Washington, D.C. Jewish Museum less than 10
days ago and the attempted firebombing of Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's home
in April.
The increasing tempo of violence makes the pattern hard to ignore.
The American anti-Israel movement has radicalized," Lehman said.
It is also hard not to draw a connection between the rhetoric used by radical protesters over
the past two years and the recent wave of violence.
There is only one solution, students and marchers have chanted.
Intifada.
Revolution.
This, lighting humans on fire to advance your political goals, is what an intifada looks
like.
The issue isn't just calls for intifada.
Claims that Israel is committing genocide, demands for a Palestine from the river to
the sea, and the routine vilification of Zionists, a label invariably applied to Jews, all function
to legitimize terrorism.
This is not to suggest that protesters' speech should be silenced, no matter how offensive,
nor does it mean that anyone who criticizes Israel's conduct in Gaza is tacitly condoning
terror, Lehman wrote.
The point, rather, is that the American radical anti-Israel movement has built the intellectual
scaffolding for, and in many cases all but invited, the violence now playing out in places
like Boulder.
In the New York Post, Andrew Arthur argued Colorado attack shows why ICE can't just focus
on criminals.
Mohammed Sabri Soleiman, an Egyptian national admitted under the Biden administration who
overstayed a tourist visa, was named as a suspect in a heinous anti-Semitic attack in
Boulder, Colorado.
His arrest shows why border czar Tom Holman can't just focus on criminal illegal aliens,
Arthur said.
According to the Migration Policy Institute, there were 132.4 million admissions of foreign
nationals as non-immigrants in fiscal year 2023.
Most, but not all, went back home as they were supposed to.
A U.S. Customs and Border Protection report estimates that among the non-immigrants who
came through airports and seaports and who were expected to depart in fiscal year 2023,
1.45 percent, or 565,155 in total, didn't go home like they should have.
President Donald Trump has tasked homemen with overseeing a mass deportation program to drive
down the illegal population in the United States.
Thus far, the plan has largely focused on aliens with criminal arrests or convictions.
But immigration laws require the removal of all aliens here illegally, not just the least
sympathetic, Arthur wrote.
Soleiman is presumed innocent until proven guilty, but if he's responsible for this attack,
his actions harken back to another Egyptian overstay, Hisham Hadeus, who murdered two
and wounded three others during a July 4, 2002 attack at the El Al counter at Los Angeles
International Airport.
In the Free Press, Jeffrey Herf explored Free Palestine terrorism.
This incident, which the FBI has called a targeted terror attack, comes less than two
weeks after the assassination of Yaron Lashinsky and Sarah Milgram outside the Capital Jewish
Museum.
Their alleged killer, Elias Rodriguez, yelled exactly what the perpetrator in Boulder yelled,
Free Palestine, the slogan that echoed on campuses and in the streets,
especially since the Hamas attack of October 7, 2023, Hurf said.
They are terrorist attacks carried out against Jews in America in the name of liberation
thousands of miles away.
They are carried out by people who feel so emboldened by the global ideological assault
on Israel and its supporters that they are willing to make the leap from hatred
to violence, and if history is a guide, they will not be the last to do so.
In the United States, only a small minority of activists are likely to take that last
step from ideology to political murder.
Only a small number, one hopes, will believe that violence against Jews and Israel's supporters
is necessary and desirable in order to free Palestine," Hurf wrote.
But today, those who are prone to make that leap will gain momentum from an ideological
climate that is even more conducive to terror.
It is the denunciation of Israel, not the denunciation of terrorism, which finds the
most and the loudest expression in the universities and in other environments dominated by the pedigreed and the prestigious.
Alright that is it for what the right is saying, which brings us to what the left is saying.
The left is disturbed by the attack, but many push back on attempts to link the incident
to immigration issues.
Some argue that both sides bear responsibility for rising anti-Semitism in the U.S.
Others say the attacks in Boulder and D.C. highlight the ongoing threats to Jews.
The Washington Post editorial board wrote, anti-Semitism does not respect national borders.
It's true that Suleiman should not have been in the United States.
The Department of Homeland Security said on Monday that he is in the country illegally,
the board said.
Crimes committed by those in the country illegally should not have happened.
Even advocates of high levels of immigration must admit that the United States should know
who is entering the United States along with any threats they pose. Yet most immigrants come to this country for refuge and work.
Those who commit crimes discredit the vast majority, legal or not.
More to the point, somehow stopping all illegal immigration would not end anti-Semitism in
America. Virulent and violent anti-Semitism transcends national borders. The cold-blooded murders of two Israeli embassy staffers outside the capital Jewish Museum
last month underscored the homegrown element of the threat, the board wrote.
All American Jews are victims of such anti-Semitic terrorism, which aims to paralyze the diaspora
with fear.
There is no easy solution.
Minds can take decades to change.
Politicians who encourage and exploit divisions over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict do not
help.
In Forward Magazine, Emily Tamkin shared the two things I fear most after the horrifying
attack on Jews in Boulder.
The first, that the people injured, including one Holocaust survivor, would not survive
this.
That their lives would
end in this unbearable violence, being burned alive while rallying for the release of the
people being kept in captivity, and the second, that this latest instance of extreme violence
against Jews will bring us deeper into a new cycle in which concerns of anti-Semitism are
alternately dismissed and exploited," Tamkin said.
The cycle works like this.
Some act of anti-Semitism or violence against Jews is carried out.
Some parties then use it as a pretense, perhaps out of genuine fear or perhaps to peruse cynical
pre-existing policy goals, to justify their own preferred policy positions.
On the right, they seek a crackdown on free speech, free assembly, criticism of Israel,
immigrants or universities.
This crackdown, far from inspiring people to take anti-Semitism more seriously, further
degrades the meaning of the word, conflating anti-Semitism with criticism of Israel.
And in turn, some on the left then greet violent attacks on Jews in the United States by saying
that they are comeuppance for Israel's war in Gaza, Tamkin wrote.
The risk of copycat attacks, further acts of violence inspired by those that have already taken place, feels
alarmingly high.
In the Atlantic, Julia Cayum said sheer hate was behind the recent attacks on Jewish Americans.
The anti-Semitic motivation of these attacks is clear.
Such homicidal hate crimes have no justification.
Indeed, their collateral damage is to destroy the space for any reasonable debate
about how Israel has conducted its war in Gaza.
The two attacks are linked not only by their motivation,
but by their horrific, performative intimacy," KM wrote.
Terrorism typically wields the threat of random violence,
the notion that any innocent might be caught in its vortex of cruelty.
These attacks are different because they were directed
very specifically at people the attacker took to be Jewish.
Their intimacy was precisely intended to inflict
horror on a particular community
and imply that no Jew could be innocent.
Pervasive antisemitism is what enables attackers to believe
that they are striking back at Israel
by trying to kill any Jew anywhere.
This hateful mindset assigns responsibility for specific Israeli policies to Jewish people
all over the world.
Jews thus stand condemned purely for being Jewish, Kam said.
The Colorado victims were meeting in support of hostages taken by Hamas.
The D.C. victims were working to advance their embassy's diplomatic mission.
Both sets of people belonged to the best traditions of dialogue and peaceful advocacy, the absolute
opposite of irrational hate.
All right, let's head for the left and the right are saying, which brings us to my take.
So in my Friday piece about my struggles with Zionism, I dedicated a whole section to saying
that my unease with the label didn't mean I was joining the other team.
That is, I wasn't pronouncing myself as anti-Zionist
or anti-Israel or going to stand shoulder to shoulder
with activists on the quote unquote other side.
I wrote this for a few reasons.
One, loud sectors of that side in the United States
casually justify violence against Jews and Zionists
on a regular basis.
Two, I don't believe that many anti-Zionists
genuinely engage with the issues in Palestinian
or Gazan society that need to be addressed for peace to prevail. And three, over and
over again, I've found many pro-Palestinians assume the worst of pro-Israelis rather than
engaging with the strong arguments that exist for the cause. I was reflecting on this section
after two Israeli embassy workers were assassinated by an anti-Zionist in Washington, D.C.
as I watched a stream of activists not just downplay the killings, but celebrate them.
Then the news out of Boulder, Colorado broke.
A man screaming, free Palestine and fuck the Zionists, had used a makeshift flamethrower to light a bunch of elderly Jews on fire
who were peacefully protesting for the release of the remaining hostages in Gaza.
Well, that's kind of how the news broke.
Some outlets like NBC did a good job obscuring this reality
with headlines like, quote,
multiple Gaza hostage awareness marchers
injured in attack in Boulder.
Personally, my headline to capture the reality
of the situation would have been,
man screaming free Palestine lights members of Jewish community group on fire with flamethrower. Personally, my headline to capture the reality of the situation would have been, Man Screaming Free Palestine Lights Members
of Jewish Community Group on Fire with Flamethrower.
These incidents are starting to become a pattern.
In a matter of weeks, an anti-Zionist committed arson
at the Jewish Pennsylvania Governor's mansion,
an anti-Zionist killed two Jewish Israeli embassy workers,
and an anti-Zionist lit a group of Jewish people on fire
who were peacefully protesting for the release of hostages.
To be clear, these are just the most violent headline grabbing
and high profile incidents.
They say nothing of the day-to-day interactions
Jews and Israelis are reporting here in the US.
One might imagine how the corporate press
would cover these incidents
if the pattern were right-wing extremists
committing acts of violence
against some kind of liberal codedcoded special interest group.
When I and other Jews were expressing concern about chance to globalize the Intifada, this
is what we were talking about.
This is the nightmare realized.
And the response has been more than disheartening.
After the killing of the Israeli embassy workers, Jake Sherman, a prominent reporter at Punch
Four News, who very rarely expresses any personal opinions publicly,
tweeted about how scary being an American Jew is right now,
with synagogues armed and fortified, kids going to schools layered with security,
and campuses and cities rife with anti-Semitism.
He retweeted that post again after the Boulder News broke.
Here's a sample of some of the top replies to his tweet.
Because the most important thing during a historically sadistic genocide of mostly children
is the feelings of the people supporting it. Or this one. Now just use a little bit of
imagination to think of what scary must be like for Palestinians. Wait, you don't need to imagine
because the genocide, bombing of a hospital, schools, etc. and atrocities are live streamed to our devices every day.
Jake, these weren't American Jews, another person said. They were staff members for the Israeli embassy, a country currently committing a genocide.
It's blowback from the Israeli occupation and genocide, Jake. You slaughter people indiscriminately and you'll have to protect yourself from their anger.
This isn't ideological, it's just material analysis.
And this one, free Palestine and it all ends.
It's that simple.
I also posted something on X about how frightening
this acceleration and violence here in the US was.
And the first response I saw came in was this, quote,
it's almost like it's related to the increased barbarism
by Israel on the people of Gaza.
To be clear, these are not cherry picked responses.
They are the top comments
and they're representative of the whole.
Suffice it to say, I find the implication
that attacking Jews or Israelis in the U.S.
is an appropriate response to barbarism
by the Israeli government
to be completely and utterly deranged.
To state the obvious, you can empathize
with what it's like to be a Jew in America right now
while also empathizing with what it's like
to be a Palestinian in Gaza right now
without comparing or equating their plights.
I would never categorize my suffering or fear
as akin to anything any Gazan is experiencing in a war zone.
But I also understand how humans work.
If a person is stuck in a traffic jam
that causes them to miss a job interview,
I'm not going to criticize that person
for being upset at their own convenience
instead of dismayed for the people
who were in the accident that caused the traffic.
The plights aren't even comparable,
but people respond to experiences they feel personally.
From the other direction,
Zionists or pro-Israel readers have
told me that my writing is partially responsible for this violence. That criticizing Israel's
actions or categorizing them as an ethnic cleansing or genocide authorizes and makes me responsible
for violence against Jews. It was a very disappointing reaction to Friday's peace, but sadly one that I
expected. I suppose the implication here is that earnestly trying to describe the abhorrent actions of
a government permits others to respond violently to those actions.
Ironically, this argument accepts the same fallacy from the other side that justifies
violence against Jews by citing Israel's actions in Gaza.
It's an entirely circular blame game that centralizes the observers as main characters and completely takes agency away from bad actors truly actually doing the thing.
So to be clear, my responsibility is to report things that are true or to share my opinions
honestly and fairly.
How people choose to react to that is not my responsibility.
For instance, a false claim circulated in mainstream news outlets yesterday about Israeli forces
committing a massacre near an aid distribution site in southern Gaza.
The claim was investigated and debunked, but it had already spread like wildfire before
the truth came out.
If we had inaccurately reported such a story, that's something to hold me to account for.
But the actions of others in response to my writing, most of whom have probably never
seen my writing, I don't think so. Just as American Jews aren't responsible
for atrocities committed by the Israeli military, I'm not responsible for anti-Zionist activists
committing violence against American Jews. Obviously, I can see that these things are
related. I know that extreme rhetoric from the pro-Palestine side is going to incite
violence in the United States.
That's exactly why I express concern
about college campus protesters calling
to globalize the Intifada,
a word that is not associated with peaceful demonstrations.
I also know that Israel's actions in Gaza
put more Jews in danger globally.
I've written repeatedly about how Israel's response
to October 7th has made both Israelis and Jews all over the world less safe, which is borne out by incidents like this accelerating
in frequency. But understanding how these things are related is not the same as accepting these
actions as justifiable. I don't blame heated rhetoric for the actions of a deranged man with
a flamethrower. I blame the man with the flamethrower. I don't blame the Israeli government
for the murder of two Israeli embassy workers.
I blame the murderer.
It's one thing to insist on turning the temperature down
for the cause of mitigating the tension and violence,
but it's another thing to blame people
for things they are not responsible for.
And not for nothing,
but if you want to understand why so many Jews
believe so deeply in the project of Israel,
look around. This is it. Literally. One Israeli writer whom I have a great deal of respect for privately wrote to me about my piece on Friday and said something that struck a chord.
There have always been anti-Zionist Jews, he said. They are the safe Jews. Indeed, anti-Zionism is
a good signal of the safety and goodness of a particular moment
in history for the Jews, while Zionism is a product of the repeated collapse of that
safety and morality.
In other words, one positively assured way to produce more Zionism, more necessity for
Israel and more belief in the cause, is to make a place like the United States less safe
for Jews.
This, truly dark twist of irony seems to be something
these pro-Palestine radicals don't understand,
from the college campuses to the violent actors.
Much the way every bomb Israel drops in Gaza
will create new anti-Israel radicals hell bent
on destroying Israel for the rest of their lives.
Every anti-Israel march in the US
that bleeds into anti-Semitism,
or every random attack on a Jew,
or every act of vandalism of a synagogue,
that will create a new Zionist,
or radicalize an existing one toward accepting more extreme Israeli actions
to ensure a Jewish homeland.
Truly grasping this reality is scary.
Watching the ways the worst actions of these groups feed and motivate each other,
seeing their relationship worsen in real time
as it has in fits and spurts throughout history
and knowing how hard it is to stop the cycle.
It's all terrifying, but we are there
and I don't know where we will go next.
I believe Israel is committed to a path
of ethnically cleansing the Gaza Strip.
The anti-Israel activists are committed to making Israel
and its supporters and any tangentially related Jew pay the price.
And the more those Jews, Israelis, or Zionists feel threatened, the more those Jews, Israelis,
and Zionists are going to believe in the necessity of a Jewish state.
And around we go.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
What is happy travels?
It's exploring the world your way and creating cherished memories with a sun vacation, cruise,
flight or hotel deal.
That's by experts who have been where you are now and have gone where you want to go. Booking is easy with
Vacations for Every Traveler, organized by destination, travel provider, and more.
Find your getaway, contact a travel expert, or visit www.stellavacations.com.
All right, that is it for my take today. We are skipping your questions answered because my take got a bit lengthy.
So I'm going to send it back to John for the rest of the podcast and I will see you guys
tomorrow.
Have a good one.
Peace.
Thanks, Isaac.
Here's your under the radar story for today, Isaac. Here's your Under the Radar story for today, folks.
The Justice Department is reportedly investigating the pardons issued by former President Joe
Biden during the final days of his term. According to an internal email reviewed by Reuters,
Ed Martin, the Justice Department's pardon attorney, is assessing whether Biden was competent
and whether others were taking advantage of him through the use of auto pen or other means.
The investigation will focus on preemptive pardons for members of Biden's family and
clemency for 37 death row prisoners issued shortly before President Trump's inauguration.
President Trump and his supporters have claimed that Biden did not authorize the pardons,
which the former president's aides denied.
Reuters has this story and there's a link in today's episode description.
Alright next up is our numbers section.
The age range of victims in the Boulder attack on June 1st was 52 to 88.
The number of terrorist plots or attacks targeting Jews, Zionists, or Jewish institutions in
the United States since January 2020 is 16, according to the Anti-Defamation League Center
on Extremism.
The number of those incidents that occurred between July 2024 and June 2025 is nine.
The number of non-immigrant admissions, allowing foreign nationals into the United States for non-immigration purposes, in fiscal year 2022, the year suspected attacker Mohammed Soleiman
entered the country, was 96.8 million, according to the Migration Policy Institute.
The estimated number of overstay events, when a non-immigrant lawfully admitted to the United
States remains in the country beyond their authorized period of admission in fiscal year 2022 was 853,955, according to a U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Report. The estimated overstay rate for non-immigrant visitors who did not depart the United States
on time and in accordance with the terms of their admission in fiscal year 2022 was 3.67%.
And the estimated overstay rate for non-immigrants from Egypt, Suleiman's country of origin,
admitted to the United States for business or pleasure in fiscal year 2022 was 7.94%.
And last but not least, our Have a Nice Day story.
A 322-pound loggerhead turtle named Lenny was found struggling to swim after being attacked by a shark an underwater
Photographer spotted the injured turtle brought him to the surface and boated him to shore where Lenny took a turtle ambulance
To a nonprofit turtle hospital in Marathon, Florida
Loggerhead turtles are an endangered species, with only
one in one thousand hatchlings reaching adulthood, meaning Lenny's survival is crucial for his
species, and survive he did. On March 25th, Lenny was released, healed and healthy, back
to the reef where he had been found. NBC News has this story and there's a link in today's episode description.
Alright everybody, that is it for today's episode.
As always, if you'd like to support our work,
please go to readtangle.com,
where you can sign up for a newsletter membership,
podcast membership, or a bundled membership
that gets you a discount on both.
We'll be right back here tomorrow.
For Isaac and the rest of the crew,
this is John Law signing off.
Have a great day, y'all.
Peace.
Our executive editor and founder is me, Isaac Saul,
and our executive producer is John Lull.
Today's episode was edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas.
Our editorial staff is led by managing editor Ari Weitzman
with senior editor Will K. Back
and associate editors Hunter Tasperson, Audrey Morehead,
Bailey Saul, Lindsay Knuth, and Kendall White.
Music for the podcast was produced by Dyett75.
To learn more
about Tangle and to sign up for a membership, please visit our website at
retangle.com.
What is happy travels? It's exploring the world your way and creating cherished memories
with a sun vacation, cruise, flight or hotel deal.
That's by experts who have been where you are now and have gone where you want to go.
Booking is easy with vacations for every traveler.
Organized by destination, travel provider and more.
Find your getaway. Contact a travel expert or visit
StellaVacations.com