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DOJ Granted Approval to Seek Death Penalty in Murder of Israeli Embassy Staffers
|By
Matis Glenn2 MIN READ
Published Aug. 6, 2025, 9:30 PM
US News

Federal authorities on Wednesday unsealed an indictment against Elias Rodriguez, formally charging him in the killings of Israeli Embassy staffers Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim earlier this year, according to CNN. The indictment outlines nearly ten serious offenses.
Among the charges are premeditated murder and hate crimes resulting in death. The Justice Department has also been granted approval to pursue the death penalty if Rodriguez is convicted, an unusual move in Washington, D.C., where capital punishment cases are rarely brought forward.
Officials said the decision underscores the Department’s determination to demonstrate that Rodriguez’s acts were driven by antisemitism. Prosecutors succeeded in convincing a grand jury of the hate-based motive, which is central to the case moving forward.
Rodriguez has not yet submitted a plea. He remains in federal detention following his arrest after the May 21 shooting.
Surveillance video, presented by prosecutors, reportedly captures Rodriguez approaching Lischinsky and Milgrim as they exited the Capital Jewish Museum. The footage allegedly shows him firing repeatedly, then leaning over them and shooting again after they had collapsed.
Prosecutors say Milgrim tried to escape by crawling away, but Rodriguez followed her and fired more shots. He then allegedly reloaded his weapon and continued shooting as she attempted to sit up.
Rodriguez’s hatred for Israel was apparent both in his social media activity and in what he reportedly told police after his arrest: “I did it for Palestine, I did it for Gaza.”
One of his online posts from May 2024 included a prayer to “vaporize every Israeli 18 and above so these kids have some chance at being human.”
Authorities also allege that Rodriguez prepared a manifesto about Israel’s war in Gaza, which he intended to publish online following the attack. The document is said to include incitement to violence against Israelis.
The indictment characterizes the attack as not only premeditated but particularly cruel. Prosecutors emphasized that the method in which Milgrim was killed was “especially heinous, cruel, and depraved,” a factor that could weigh heavily in support of seeking the death penalty.
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