Suspect in shooting outside Jewish museum in DC faces local, federal charges: What we know
The May 21 shooting of Yaron Lischinsky, 30, and his girlfriend Sarah Lynn Milgrim, 26, outside the Capital Jewish Museum has drawn universal condemnation from politicians and civil rights leaders, with Attorney General Pam Bondi calling it an antisemitic act of violence.
Elias Rodriguez, 30, of Chicago, was arrested after the shooting and on May 22 charged in D.C. with two counts of first-degree murder, and with federal counts of murdering foreign officials and firearm offenses. Upon arrest, Rodriguez allegedly said he "did it for Palestine."
"We are going to continue to investigate this as a hate crime and as a crime of terrorism," U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro told reporters.
In court on May 22 for his first appearance, Rodriguez waived his right to a detention hearing. A preliminary hearing was scheduled for June 18.
It wasn't clear if Rodriguez had an attorney who could speak on his behalf.
Here's what we know about the shooting:
Lischinsky and Milgrim were shot while they were leaving an event hosted by the American Jewish Committee at the museum on May 21 at about 9 p.m.
According to an affidavit in the criminal complaint against Rodriguez, he was seen on surveillance video outside the museum walking across the street toward the museum. The victims were standing outside, preparing to enter a crosswalk. Rodriguez walked passed the victims and two other people, then turned to face the victims' backs and fired several times at them, the affidavit said.
The victims fell to the ground, and Rodriguez then went closer to them. Milgrim was seen on the footage trying to crawl away, and he shot her several more times, the affidavit said. Rodriguez then jogged away.
A witness told investigators they saw Rodriguez make a throwing motion after the shooting, and a firearm was located in that area.
After the shooting, Rodriguez entered the museum, where people inside spoke with him, unaware he was a suspect. He was detained by event security inside, officials previously said.
Lischinsky and Milgrim were both employees at the Israeli embassy, and were days away from getting engaged, according to Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter. Lischinsky was an Israeli citizen and an "official guest" of the United States.
The two were working to promote reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians, according to advocacy groups with which they were involved.
Lischinsky was a research assistant for Middle East and North African affairs at the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C., according to his LinkedIn. Milgrim worked at the Israeli embassy since November 2023, according to her LinkedIn profile, which said her "passion lies at the intersection of peacebuilding, religious engagement, and environmental work."
Sarah Milgrim remembered: Shooting victim was 'a light' who fought antisemitism
Milgrim's friend, Ayelet Razin, told USA TODAY she was dedicated to fighting antisemitism and called her "a light and an enlightened person," someone whose presence could instantly lift the people around her.
"That was her most powerful armor: her wit, her intelligence, and her maturity," Razin said.
While he was detained, Rodriguez shouted "Free, free Palestine," video of him being escorted out of the museum shows.
"I did it for Palestine, I did it for Gaza," he told investigators, according to the affidavit.
He also allegedly expressed admiration for a person who set themselves on fire outside the Israeli embassy in February 2024, calling the person a "martyr," the affidavit said.
Rodriguez flew from Chicago to Washington, D.C., on May 20, according to the affidavit. He brought a firearm with him in his checked luggage. The gun used at the shooting was a 9mm handgun purchased in Illinois in March 2020.
Rodriguez was born and raised in Chicago and attended the University of Illinois at Chicago, a biography accessed through the Internet Archive from the website for the nonprofit the History Makers said. He worked there as an oral history researcher, according to his LinkedIn account. At the time of the shooting he was working for the American Osteopathic Information Association, the group confirmed in a statement.
Contributing: John Bacon, Thao Nguyen, Jorge L. Ortiz and Melina Khan, USA TODAY; Reuters
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: DC shooting suspect faces local, federal charges: What we know
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
14 minutes ago
- CNN
Could a ceasefire finally be struck in Gaza? Here's what to know
Donald Trump has not been shy about his desire for an end to the war in Gaza. After the 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran concluded with a ceasefire, the US president has been pushing hard for a truce between Israel and Hamas, saying he was 'looking for it to happen next week,' when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is set to visit the White House. Trump announced Tuesday that Israel had 'agreed to the necessary conditions' to finalize a 60-day ceasefire. Netanyahu will convene his full cabinet on Saturday night to discuss it. Hamas, meanwhile, said it was considering the latest proposal, without indicating whether it would accept it. The two sides have long had conflicting demands that negotiators have been unable to bridge, but there are renewed hopes of a deal as the war enters its 21st month. Here's what to know. Since the Israel-Iran ceasefire on June 24, mediators Qatar and Egypt – as well as the United States – have redoubled their calls for a new Gaza truce. A Qatari foreign ministry spokesman told CNN the Israel-Iran agreement had created 'momentum' for the latest talks between Israel and Hamas. CNN speaks to families devastated by the Israeli strike on a waterfront cafe in Gaza City Netanyahu's government has faced mounting international criticism for the suffering its war is inflicting on Palestinians in Gaza. Israel imposed a total blockade on humanitarian deliveries to the enclave in March. It somewhat eased the blockade in May, after a chorus of global experts warned that hundreds of thousands of people could soon starve. Hundreds of Palestinians in Gaza have been killed by Israeli strikes in recent days. And aid distribution has been marred by violence, with hundreds killed on their way to try to obtain food from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), the controversial US-backed aid initiative. Pressure is also growing on Netanyahu from within Israel. Opposition leader Yair Lapid said Wednesday that he would join the coalition government to make a hostage deal possible. Trump predicted Tuesday that Netanyahu wanted to end the war. 'He wants to. I can tell you he wants to. I think we'll have a deal next week,' Trump told reporters. The precise details of the new proposal for a 60-day ceasefire and hostage release deal remain murky. The Qatari prime minister previously said Qatar and Egypt had been working to find a 'middle ground' to move forward from the US-conceived truce proposed months ago. That proposal outlined a 60-day ceasefire during which Hamas would release 10 living Israeli hostages and the bodies of a further 18 hostages taken by Hamas during its attacks on October 7, 2023. Of the 50 hostages still in Gaza, at least 20 of them are believed to be alive, according to the Israeli government. The United States and the mediators have provided stronger assurances about reaching a settlement to end the war in Gaza as part of the updated proposal, the Israeli official told CNN. The official did not provide the specific language in the document, but said the wording is stronger than previous assurances. As part of the latest proposal, Israel has also agreed to allow a surge of humanitarian aid through traditional UN-run humanitarian channels rather than through the controversial US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the Israeli official said. In addition to the aim of bringing the hostages home, Netanyahu has not wavered from his more maximalist aims: disarmament of Gaza and the destruction of Hamas' military capabilities and governance abilities. 'I'm telling you — there will be no Hamas. No 'Hamastan.' We are not going back to that. It's over,' Netanyahu said Wednesday. 'We will bring back all our hostages.' But over the weekend, the prime minister made a rhetorical shift in laying out Israel's goals – for the first time prioritizing the return of hostages ahead of what he once called the 'supreme objective' of defeating Hamas. Netanyahu said 'many opportunities have opened up' following Israel's military operations in Iran, including the possibility of bringing home everyone still held captive by Hamas. 'Firstly, to rescue the hostages,' he said. 'Of course, we will also need to solve the Gaza issue, defeat Hamas, but I believe we will accomplish both missions.' It comes as the Israeli military this week recommended pursuing a diplomatic path in Gaza after nearly two years of fighting and the elimination of much of Hamas' senior leadership. On Tuesday, a military official told CNN that Israel has not fully achieved all of its war goals, but as Hamas' forces have shrunk and gone into hiding, it has become more difficult to effectively target what remains of the militant group. 'It's harder now to achieve tactical goals,' the official said. Hamas has three main demands: a permanent end to the fighting, for humanitarian assistance to be carried out by the United Nations, and for Israel to retreat to the positions it held on March 2 this year, before it renewed its offensive and occupied the northern part of the Strip. A senior Hamas official told CNN in late May that the group is 'ready to return the hostages in one day – just we want a guarantee that war will not come again after that.' In response to the earlier Trump administration-backed ceasefire proposal in May, Hamas requested US assurances that permanent ceasefire negotiations will continue and that fighting will not resume after the 60-day pause. Whether the ceasefire will be temporary or a pathway to a permanent truce is the biggest sticking point between the warring parties. Hamas has also shown no willingness to relinquish its political and military power in Gaza. In the 21 months of war between Israel and Hamas, ceasefires have been in place for a total of only nine weeks. More than 57,000 people, of which more than 17,000 are children, have been killed in Gaza during the fighting, according to the Palestinian health ministry. The first ceasefire came into effect in November 2023, but lasted only a week. In that time, 105 hostages were released from Gaza, in exchange for scores of Palestinian prisoners. A second ceasefire was not struck until January 2025, shortly before Trump's return to the White House. In just over 8 weeks – the first 'phase' of the ceasefire – Hamas freed 33 hostages, with Israel releasing around 50 Palestinian prisoners for every Israeli freed. Under the planned second stage, Israel was supposed to agree to a permanent ceasefire. But Israel resumed its offensive on March 18, shattering the ceasefire and derailing the talks, saying it did so to put pressure on Hamas to release the remaining hostages.


CNN
15 minutes ago
- CNN
Could a ceasefire finally be struck in Gaza? Here's what to know
Donald Trump has not been shy about his desire for an end to the war in Gaza. After the 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran concluded with a ceasefire, the US president has been pushing hard for a truce between Israel and Hamas, saying he was 'looking for it to happen next week,' when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is set to visit the White House. Trump announced Tuesday that Israel had 'agreed to the necessary conditions' to finalize a 60-day ceasefire. Netanyahu will convene his full cabinet on Saturday night to discuss it. Hamas, meanwhile, said it was considering the latest proposal, without indicating whether it would accept it. The two sides have long had conflicting demands that negotiators have been unable to bridge, but there are renewed hopes of a deal as the war enters its 21st month. Here's what to know. Since the Israel-Iran ceasefire on June 24, mediators Qatar and Egypt – as well as the United States – have redoubled their calls for a new Gaza truce. A Qatari foreign ministry spokesman told CNN the Israel-Iran agreement had created 'momentum' for the latest talks between Israel and Hamas. CNN speaks to families devastated by the Israeli strike on a waterfront cafe in Gaza City Netanyahu's government has faced mounting international criticism for the suffering its war is inflicting on Palestinians in Gaza. Israel imposed a total blockade on humanitarian deliveries to the enclave in March. It somewhat eased the blockade in May, after a chorus of global experts warned that hundreds of thousands of people could soon starve. Hundreds of Palestinians in Gaza have been killed by Israeli strikes in recent days. And aid distribution has been marred by violence, with hundreds killed on their way to try to obtain food from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), the controversial US-backed aid initiative. Pressure is also growing on Netanyahu from within Israel. Opposition leader Yair Lapid said Wednesday that he would join the coalition government to make a hostage deal possible. Trump predicted Tuesday that Netanyahu wanted to end the war. 'He wants to. I can tell you he wants to. I think we'll have a deal next week,' Trump told reporters. The precise details of the new proposal for a 60-day ceasefire and hostage release deal remain murky. The Qatari prime minister previously said Qatar and Egypt had been working to find a 'middle ground' to move forward from the US-conceived truce proposed months ago. That proposal outlined a 60-day ceasefire during which Hamas would release 10 living Israeli hostages and the bodies of a further 18 hostages taken by Hamas during its attacks on October 7, 2023. Of the 50 hostages still in Gaza, at least 20 of them are believed to be alive, according to the Israeli government. The United States and the mediators have provided stronger assurances about reaching a settlement to end the war in Gaza as part of the updated proposal, the Israeli official told CNN. The official did not provide the specific language in the document, but said the wording is stronger than previous assurances. As part of the latest proposal, Israel has also agreed to allow a surge of humanitarian aid through traditional UN-run humanitarian channels rather than through the controversial US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the Israeli official said. In addition to the aim of bringing the hostages home, Netanyahu has not wavered from his more maximalist aims: disarmament of Gaza and the destruction of Hamas' military capabilities and governance abilities. 'I'm telling you — there will be no Hamas. No 'Hamastan.' We are not going back to that. It's over,' Netanyahu said Wednesday. 'We will bring back all our hostages.' But over the weekend, the prime minister made a rhetorical shift in laying out Israel's goals – for the first time prioritizing the return of hostages ahead of what he once called the 'supreme objective' of defeating Hamas. Netanyahu said 'many opportunities have opened up' following Israel's military operations in Iran, including the possibility of bringing home everyone still held captive by Hamas. 'Firstly, to rescue the hostages,' he said. 'Of course, we will also need to solve the Gaza issue, defeat Hamas, but I believe we will accomplish both missions.' It comes as the Israeli military this week recommended pursuing a diplomatic path in Gaza after nearly two years of fighting and the elimination of much of Hamas' senior leadership. On Tuesday, a military official told CNN that Israel has not fully achieved all of its war goals, but as Hamas' forces have shrunk and gone into hiding, it has become more difficult to effectively target what remains of the militant group. 'It's harder now to achieve tactical goals,' the official said. Hamas has three main demands: a permanent end to the fighting, for humanitarian assistance to be carried out by the United Nations, and for Israel to retreat to the positions it held on March 2 this year, before it renewed its offensive and occupied the northern part of the Strip. A senior Hamas official told CNN in late May that the group is 'ready to return the hostages in one day – just we want a guarantee that war will not come again after that.' In response to the earlier Trump administration-backed ceasefire proposal in May, Hamas requested US assurances that permanent ceasefire negotiations will continue and that fighting will not resume after the 60-day pause. Whether the ceasefire will be temporary or a pathway to a permanent truce is the biggest sticking point between the warring parties. Hamas has also shown no willingness to relinquish its political and military power in Gaza. In the 21 months of war between Israel and Hamas, ceasefires have been in place for a total of only nine weeks. More than 57,000 people, of which more than 17,000 are children, have been killed in Gaza during the fighting, according to the Palestinian health ministry. The first ceasefire came into effect in November 2023, but lasted only a week. In that time, 105 hostages were released from Gaza, in exchange for scores of Palestinian prisoners. A second ceasefire was not struck until January 2025, shortly before Trump's return to the White House. In just over 8 weeks – the first 'phase' of the ceasefire – Hamas freed 33 hostages, with Israel releasing around 50 Palestinian prisoners for every Israeli freed. Under the planned second stage, Israel was supposed to agree to a permanent ceasefire. But Israel resumed its offensive on March 18, shattering the ceasefire and derailing the talks, saying it did so to put pressure on Hamas to release the remaining hostages.
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
IDF securing GHF sites critical for stifling Hamas control of population in Gaza
This comes amid fierce allegations and footage of live bullets shot at Palestinians at the GHF sites, which the UN has called a humanitarian catastrophe, where hundreds have been reportedly killed. TheIDF's operations in southern Gaza to secure the food distribution sites run by the American-run Gaza Humanitarian Foundation are to break the grip of Hamas on the local population, and to provide Palestinians with an opportunity to eat from another hand that isn't the terrorist group, the IDF said on Monday. This comes amid fierce allegations and footage of live bullets shot at Palestinians at theGHF sites, which the United Nations has called a humanitarian catastrophe, where hundreds have reportedly been killed. Haaretz on Sunday quoted unnamed IDF soldiers who said they were told to fire at crowds to keep them back. The IDF said it does not intentionally shoot at civilians; rather, it is only focused on maintaining order in a chaotic situation, while a GHF spokesperson said there have been no deaths at or near any of the GHF aid distribution sites. The IDF did note one case where bullets were shot into a crowd, and 30 people were injured, but the military maintained that it knows which bullets are its own, it investigates each case, and that the numbers coming out of Gaza are littered with Hamas's influence, are unreliable, and get bolstered by international organizations, which have representatives on the ground. Reports have swarmed regarding the fate of the food once it enters the enclave. Israel and the United States have accused Hamas of stealing aid from the UN-led operations, and there have been reports of armed clans getting there first; the military said that from what it has seen, these gangs get to the food before Hamas can. The IDF said that Hamas has killed some in the groups coming to get food, shot at others, and threw them down the stairs of Nasser Hospital inKhan Yunis, with instructions to withhold care from them. One of the issues facing the Israeli forces on the ground is that there is no comprehensive way to vet the people showing up, and the chaos can induce fear among the soldiers. The IDF tries to maintain order by giving instructions about when and when not to arrive at the sites, but the chaos reigns, and the work is not done. Should a ceasefire be signed in the next few weeks, the IDF would be prepared to continue humanitarian aid. As part of this operational effort, the IDF has recently taken several measures to reorganize access routes and improve the functionality of aid distribution centers. These actions include erecting fences, installing directional and warning signs, and opening additional access routes. The IDF has also set up barriers and checkpoints to regulate vehicle movement and modified the layout of the centers to allow for external observation of remaining aid packages at the end of each day. These adjustments are designed to ensure the smooth passage of Gazan civilians, facilitate the orderly distribution of aid, and maintain the continuity of the IDF's security operations in the area. The IDF reaffirmed its commitment to supporting the humanitarian effort while ensuring the safety and security of all those involved.