Muslim Utah mall worker stabbed 15 times over his religion: Police
The stabbing took place inside the Valley Fair Mall in Utah's West Valley City on Monday. (Photo source: Valley Mall official Google profile)


A Utah man was arrested Tuesday for stabbing a Muslim man multiple times because of his religion, local police said in court records.

Police said the suspect ​told them he "intends to kill Muslims" and that he constituted "a ​substantial ⁠danger to the public if released based on his violent actions ... ideologies and pre-planned mass casualty events."

The incident took place inside the Valley Fair Mall in Utah's West Valley City Monday. The male victim had "multiple stab wounds all over his body and was bleeding profusely," police said in an affidavit.

Authorities said the suspect was pinned to the ground by bystanders before officers arrived on the scene.

The suspect, Peter Michael Larsen, 48, was booked into the Salt Lake County jail for a probe over attempted murder and prohibited dangerous weapon conduct, jail records ⁠showed ⁠Tuesday. The victim was a male Muslim kiosk worker.

The suspect said "he had targeted the victim with intent to kill him because of his religion (Muslim)," according to the police booking affidavit.

The suspect approached the Muslim man, asked for his name, asked about his religion and indicated he wanted a bottle of water, the Salt Lake Tribune reported, citing comments from Imam Shuaib Din, who leads the Utah Islamic Center and had been in contact with the victim's ⁠family.

As the victim turned to get the water, the attacker began stabbing him, according to Din.

The victim was hospitalized and in critical condition. A friend set up a GoFundMe page for ​him, which said the Muslim man was stabbed 15 times and needed surgeries.

The attacker ​was also hospitalized because of wounds sustained while he was subdued by bystanders before being booked into the Salt Lake County jail.

Muslim rights groups, ⁠including ‌the Council ‌on American-Islamic Relations, condemned the incident.

U.S. rights advocates have noted ⁠rising Islamophobia over the last two-plus decades following ‌the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and more recently because of anti-immigration policies, white supremacy and the fallout ​of Israel's genocidal war on Gaza.

Deadly ⁠violent attacks in recent years include a 2023 ⁠stabbing of a 6-year-old Muslim child in Illinois whose killer was sentenced to 53 ⁠years in prison and ​died in custody and a 2026 shooting at a San Diego mosque that left five dead, including two teenage suspects.