Two Israel embassy aides shot dead in Washington, officials say suspect shouted 'Free Palestine'
Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim who were shot and killed as they left an event at the Capital Jewish Museum, pose for a picture at an unknown location, in this handout image released by Embassy of Israel to the U.S. on May 22, 2025. Embassy of Israel to the USA via X/Handout via REUTERS
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Two Israeli embassy staffers were killed
by a lone gunman in Washington, D.C., while leaving an event outside
the Capital Jewish Museum on Wednesday night, and the suspect chanted
"Free Palestine" after he was taken into custody, officials said.
The victims, Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim, a young couple about to get engaged, were committed to building bridges between Arabs and Jews in hopes of ending bloodshed in the Middle East, according to people who knew them and advocacy groups they belonged to.
Israeli embassies around the world immediately stepped up
security.
Israel faces sustained international condemnation for its
escalating Gaza military
offensive, while Jewish advocacy groups have warned of a rise in
antisemitic incidents globally.
Washington Metropolitan Police Chief Pamela Smith said a man
shot at a group of four people with a handgun, hitting both the victims. He was
seen pacing outside the museum prior to the shooting, little more than a mile
(2 km) from the White House.
Smith said the single suspect, identified as 30-year-old
Elias Rodriguez from Chicago, chanted "Free Palestine, Free
Palestine" after being taken into custody by event security.
"Once in handcuffs, the suspect identified where he
discarded the weapon, and that weapon has been recovered, and he implied that
he committed the offense," Smith said, adding that he had had no previous
contact with police.
FBI agents were seen at his apartment in Chicago on
Thursday, where law enforcement blocked off the street.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi told reporters that
authorities believe the suspect acted alone.
Witness Katie Kalisher, 29, said she was among people in the
museum who were chatting to a man who entered looking very scared after
gunshots were heard outside when he suddenly pulled out a keffiyeh scarf.
"He says, 'I did it. I did it for Gaza, free, free
Palestine.' And he's chanting this. And then suddenly the police come in and
they arrest him," said Kalisher, a jewelry designer.
Rodriguez was once affiliated with a far-left group in
Chicago, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, according to a post from the
group on X. The group said that Rodriguez had a brief association with a PSL
branch that ended in 2017 and that they knew of no contact with him in more
than seven years.
"We have nothing to do with this shooting and do not
support it," the organisation said.
Rodriguez worked at the healthcare nonprofit American
Osteopathic Information Association, the organisation confirmed in a statement
expressing sympathy for the victims.
"We were shocked and saddened to learn that an AOIA
employee has been arrested as a suspect in this horrific crime," the
statement said.
He had also worked as an oral history researcher at The
HistoryMakers, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving African American stories,
according to a now-deleted biography on the group's website.
Rodriguez was born and reared in Chicago and graduated from
the University of Illinois Chicago with an English degree, the deleted page said.
He previously worked as a content writer for commercial and noncommercial
technology firms, the page said.
U.S. President Donald Trump condemned
the shooting.
"These horrible D.C. killings, based obviously on
antisemitism, must end, NOW!" he said in a message on Truth Social.
"Hatred and Radicalism have no place in the USA."
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his heart
ached for the families of the victims, "whose lives were cut short in a
moment by an abhorrent antisemitic murderer."
"We are witness to the terrible cost of the
antisemitism and wild incitement against the State of Israel," he said on
X, adding that both "must be fought to the utmost."
The shooting is likely to fuel polarisation in the United
States over the war in Gaza between supporters of Israel and pro-Palestinian
demonstrators.
Conservative supporters of Israel, led by Trum,p have branded
pro-Palestinian protests as antisemitic. His administration has detained
protesters without charge and cut off funding to elite U.S. universities that
have permitted demonstrations.
Yechiel Leiter, Israel's ambassador to the U.S., told
reporters that Lischinsky had bought an engagement ring and planned to propose
to Milgrim next week during a trip to Jerusalem.
The German-Israeli Society said Lischinsky had grown up in
Bavaria and spoke fluent German.
"We remember him as an open-minded, intelligent and
deeply committed person whose interest in German-Israeli relations and ways to
achieve peaceful coexistence in the Middle East brightened the environment
around him," said the society's president, Volker Beck.
Lischinsky always planned to become a diplomat and thought
his diverse background - a Christian who converted to Judaism after moving to
Israel - would help him in his chosen career, according to Nissim Otmazgin, one
of his former professors at Hebrew University.
Tech2Peace, an advocacy group training young Palestinians
and Israelis and promoting dialogue between them, said Milgrim was an active
volunteer who "brought people together with empathy and purpose."
Milgrim was committed to helping LGBTQ+ Jews feel included,
according to Joshua Maxey, executive director of Bet Mishpachah, a synagogue in
Washington that is welcoming to the LGBTQ+ community and that Milgrim attended.
Hours after the shooting, several people gathered at the
scene, in the area of 3rd and F Streets.
Rabbi Levi Shemtov said the couple had attended his Washington
synagogue occasionally.
"It's very sad to see that instead of these people
coming to the ultimate celebration of their life - they were about to get
engaged - they get shot dead in the street just because of who they are,"
the rabbi said.
The museum event for young diplomats was hosted by the
American Jewish Committee, an advocacy group that supports Israel and confronts
antisemitism, according to its website.
The head of the American Jewish Committee, Ted Deutch, told
CNN the Jewish community around the world felt under threat. Some Israelis said
the shooting made them afraid to
go abroad.
Rights advocates have noted both rising anti-Jewish and anti-Arab hate
incidents in the U.S.


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