A maniac accused of gunning down two Israeli Embassy workers may face the death penalty, according to newly-unsealed court documents.
Elias Rodriguez, 31, was charged with nine counts, including two hate crimes resulting in death charges and two of assault, in the killings of Yaron Lischinsky, 30, and Sarah Lynn Milgrim, 26, outside Washington DC’s Capital Jewish Museum in May.
The indictment also includes notice of special findings that would allow the Justice Department to potentially pursue the death penalty, according to documents filed Wednesday in federal court in Washington.
Rodriguez, who was heard shouting, “Free Palestine,” after the shootings, was previously charged with murder of foreign officials and other crimes.
The new hate crime charges — added after the case was brought before a grand jury — means prosecutors must prove Rodriguez was motivated by antisemitism when he gunned down the soon-to-be-engaged couple.
Follow The Post’s coverage on Israeli Embassy staffers killed in DC
- Israeli Embassy staffers ID’d as couple fatally shot by terrorist who yelled ‘Free, free Palestine’ near DC’s Capital Jewish Museum
- How left-wing Chicago social justice warrior Elias Rodriguez allegedly became homegrown anti-Israel terrorist
- Slain Israeli Embassy staffer Sarah Milgrim spoke out over antisemitic messages at high school 8 years before fatal shooting
- DC Jewish Museum shooting victim Yaron Lischinsky’s body to be returned to Israel Friday
- Twisted cryptocurrency launches in tribute of suspected terrorist Elias Rodriguez


Rodriguez flew to DC from Chicago with a handgun in his checked luggage ahead of the May 21 killings, and purchased a ticket for the event three hours before it started, authorities said in court papers.
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