Did he aspire to be a killer? Or a cop? Or both?? The man accused of killing four University of Idaho students at their off-campus home applied for a job with a local police department months before the attacks.
07.01.2023 - 04:01 / perezhilton.com
When an arrest was made last week in the University of Idaho murders, it came as such a shock we really had no idea how the police even found this guy. But after the release of the probable cause affidavit on Thursday, we now know the Moscow PD and FBI found a MOUNTAIN of evidence.
His car was caught on video, his phone data was all around the house, his DNA was on a knife sheath left at the murder scene, and on top of all that, one of the surviving roommates SAW A MAN LEAVING and provided a description that fit!!!
So now we know why police went after him. But it turns out there’s even more that cops saw while staking him out before the big arrest.
Related: Kohberger’s Chilling Connection To The Infamous BTK Killer
Kohberger traveled from his residence in Washington State University, where he was pursuing a PhD in criminology, to his parents’ home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania in mid-December, about a month after the murders of Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, Ethan Chapin, and Maddie Mogen. His whereabouts were learned about four days before his bust — so what was happening before then?
Law enforcement sources told CNN on Friday, local police were tasked with two missions: the first was to keep their eyes on him to make sure his exact location was known the moment the arrest warrant was issued. The other was to find something with DNA on it that they could match with what they had from the crime scene. It seems that after being extremely sloppy in Moscow, Kohberger’s criminology studies finally came into play at this time. Because it seems like he was actively trying to stop the police from getting his DNA.
According to a law enforcement source, police watched as the 28-year-old “cleaned his car, inside and outside,
Did he aspire to be a killer? Or a cop? Or both?? The man accused of killing four University of Idaho students at their off-campus home applied for a job with a local police department months before the attacks.
The court-appointed public defender assigned to represent murder suspect Bryan Kohberger had been working on behalf of the mother of one of the case’s victims. On January 5, Kohberger made his first
The trial won’t be for a few months, but many following the case are already asking the question… will Bryan Kohberger face the death penalty for the brutal murders of four University of Idaho students??
In the weeks since Bryan Kohberger‘s arrest, we’ve learned the police had a surprising amount of evidence against the criminology student. But if he really is guilty of the brutal murders of Kaylee Goncalves, Maddie Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin, what was his motive??
It’s looking like a few months before we actually see Bryan Kohberger face trial. But in the meantime we’re still learning so much about the alleged killer’s arrest…
The man accused of killing four University of Idaho students is believed to have messaged at least one of them repeatedly on Instagram in the weeks leading up to the slayings.
As reporters continue to dig into the past of Idaho murder suspect Bryan Kohberger, they’re only finding out more chilling details of the accused murderer’s life…
The husband of the Massachusetts woman who has been missing for nearly three full weeks has now been charged with her murder.
We’re in for a long wait for the trial of accused murderer Bryan Kohberger. But in the meantime we can learn quite a lot as reporters continue to dig into the life of the criminology grad student.
Ethan Chapin‘s mother is speaking out about how their family has managed to cope with his shocking and senseless death.
We’re in for a long wait for the murder trial of Bryan Kohberger — on Thursday his preliminary probable cause hearing wasn’t scheduled until June! But in the meantime we’re sure to learn a lot more about both the suspect and his alleged victims.
After the first few weeks of the University of Idaho murders, we were resigned to a lengthy wait before a suspect was even named. The arrest of Bryan Kohberger on December 30 was a genuine surprise — a rather reassuring one. But now that he’s in custody, the wheels of justice have slowed way back down again…
In the couple weeks since Bryan Kohberger‘s arrest, we’ve seen a mountain of evidence the cops gathered before taking him in. But does his behavior during his arrest make you even more suspicious?
One of murder suspect Bryan Kohberger‘s neighbors in Pullman, Washington claims the alleged killer asked if they’d heard about the University of Idaho student murders in the days after they happened.
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
As it turns out, Bryan Kohberger — the man accused of killing those four University of Idaho students back in mid-November — is apparently not associated with infamous serial killer Dennis Rader.
One of the families of the University of Idaho murder victims is defending the surviving roommate who saw the suspect and didn’t immediately call 911.
Last week we were pleasantly surprised when police went from no known suspect at all to making an arrest in the University of Idaho murder investigation.
The murders of University of Idaho students Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, Ethan Chapin, and Maddie Mogen shocked the entire nation, people who’d never even met these young people. But there’s one stranger who was struck particularly personally: her name is Kerri Rawson.