The 5-year-old Minnesota boy who was hurled off a Mall of America balcony is no longer in intensive care, a family spokesman said this week.

Landen Hoffman, of Woodbury, has been moved to an inpatient physical rehab program at another hospital as he continues to recover from the extensive injuries he incurred — including two broken arms, a broken leg and fractures to his face and skull — when Emmanuel Deshawn Aranda, 24, tossed him nearly 40 feet from a third-floor balcony during a random April 12 attack at the mall in Bloomington.

“There is hard work ahead!” family spokesman Noah Hanneman wrote late Thursday on an online fundraiser that has generated more than $1 million in donations from nearly 30,000 people. “And, our beautiful boy has endured much already, but he is strong and his spirit remains vibrant.”

The boy’s family announced in late June that he was on a “very challenging road to recovery” after enduring more than 15 medical procedures or surgeries since the unprovoked attack, including treatment for fluid in his lungs and stomach and a stent in a vein running through his liver.

Aranda was sentenced to 19 years in prison in June after pleading guilty to attempted murder a month earlier. He previously told authorities he was “looking for someone to kill” at the mall after repeatedly being rejected there by women for years, causing him to “lash out and be aggressive,” according to a criminal complaint.

Aranda, of Minneapolis, later told police he initially planned to kill an adult, but went after the boy as he stood with his mother, her friend and another child outside the Rainforest Cafe on the third floor.

“Your act was evil and selfish, you chose to listen to the worst parts of yourself that day,” the boy’s father said in a statement read by a prosecutor prior to Aranda’s sentencing. “You chose evil over good and chose to take your hate and hurt out on my precious boy. That is where your impact stops, you will take nothing more from us.”

Aranda’s relatives have said he suffers from mental illness, although his attorneys did not raise that issue as a defense in court, the St. Paul Pioneer Press reports.