Congressional intern, 21, gunned down on Washington DC street

A 21-year-old intern for Republican Rep. Ron Estes was murdered early this week during a targeted D.C. killing gone horribly wrong.

Intern Eric Tarpinian-Jachym was out on the streets of D.C. this Monday at 10:28 pm when “multiple suspects emerged from a vehicle and opened fire on a group of people” in a targeted hit, according to ABC News.

Three victims were hit by stray bullets from the targeted hit, including Tarpinian-Jachym, an adult female, and a 16-year-old boy.

“While the other two victims were conscious when police arrived, Tarpinian-Jachym was found unconscious,” ABC News notes. “All three were transported to local hospitals, where Tarpinian-Jachym succumbed to his injuries on Tuesday.”

Local station WUSA has since confirmed that the targeted shooting gone wrong was the result of an “ongoing dispute between two rival groups,” likely gangs.

As of Friday morning, the suspects were still on the loose, and the authorities were offering a $25,000 award for their capture.

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Besides being an intern for Estes, Tarpinian-Jachym had also been a University of Massachusetts at Amherst “rising star,” majoring in finance with a minor in political science.

“I will remember his kind heart and how he always greeted anyone who entered our office with a cheerful smile,” Estes said in a statement Wednesday. “We are grateful to Eric for his service to Kansas’ 4th District and the country.”

A number of other Republicans also paid tribute to Tarpinian-Jachym, including Rep. Nancy Mace and Sen. Mike Lee:

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One of Tarpinian-Jachym’s friends, Phillip Peterson, told WUSA that he’d “just legitimately wanted to make positive change, and that’s why he went to go intern on Capitol Hill.”

“Eric Jachym was one of the few good, kind-hearted, honest, moral, trustworthy people in Washington D.C., and he’s excited to make a difference,” he added.

The two reportedly met during a fellowship at the Fund for American Studies.

Peterson went on to say how shocked and angry he was by the shooting and murder, and that he hopes his friend is memorialized somehow.

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“Washington D.C., the shining city on the hill, the place that is where all the laws for the most powerful country in the world that has set forth the path forward that many countries have taken and become great through, has really become a failure,” he bluntly noted.

“He was a good person. There should be some sort of bill or something with his name on it to memorialize him,” Peterson added.

Approached by the Washington Post, Tarpinian-Jachym’s heartbroken mother didn’t have much to share: “There’s nothing to say.”

Meanwhile, a spokesperson for the University of Massachusetts at Amherst told the Post, “We extend our deepest condolences to all who knew him and will be communicating with the campus shortly to offer support.”

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Vivek Saxena

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