The father of the terror suspect accused of
gunning down two soon-to-be-engaged Israeli Embassy staffers at the Capital Jewish Museum was honored by a far-left member of Congress with an invitation to President Trump’s joint address this past March, The Post has exclusively learned.
“Eric Rodriguez was our guest during the President’s Joint Speech to Congress, but we don’t know his family,” a spokesperson for Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García (D-Ill.) told The Post Thursday night.
In March, he hailed Rodriguez as “an outspoken advocate against attacks on veterans’ services and the rights of unionized federal employees.”
Eric Rodriguez, father of suspected terrorist Elias, with Chicago Congressman Chuy Garcia in March. Instagram/@seiuhcii
“Eric represents the very best of our community — someone who has served his country, continues to serve his fellow veterans and fights every day to protect the dignity of working people,” the congressman said in a statement at the time.
“His presence at the Joint Address is a powerful statement: we will not sit back while veterans and workers are treated as political pawns.”
Rodriguez also
appeared in a Service Employees International Union video that same day, and said he was an Iraq War vet and an employee with the Veterans Affairs Department,
the New York Times reported.
“I’ve been with the VA for three years, and the reason why I’m in Washington, DC, is because I’m concerned about what Donald Trump, Elon Musk and DOGE are doing to the VA system.”
On Thursday, Rodriguez’s son, Elias, was charged in federal court with two counts of first-degree murder and other charges
in the cold-blooded slayings of Yaron Lischinsky, 28, and Sarah Milgrim, 26, as the Israeli Embassy employees left an event at the Capital Jewish Museum.
The accused killer from Chicago shouted, “Free, free Palestine” as he was taken into custody after allegedly opening fire, unleashing nearly two dozen rounds on the couple, who were on the verge of getting engaged in Jerusalem.
Milgrim attempted to crawl away after collapsing on the ground, according to sources and court documents.