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Victim's sister speaks out about killer

Victim's sister speaks out about killer

News.com.au25-07-2025
The sister of University of Idaho murder victim Kaylee Goncalves said everything in her body told her to 'run' as she came face-to-face with Bryan Kohberger during his sentencing – but instead delivered a powerful, blistering take-down of her sibling's killer.
'I'm not intimidated by him, truly, I'm not,' she said, 'But when I tell you, there's a primal sense of alarm. My body was telling me, 'Run, get out. This is a threat,' Alivea Goncalves told NewsNation about the chilling moment she delivered her impact statement in front of Kohberger at his sentencing.
'The best description I can give you is as if I came face-to-face with an alien,' she said. 'Behind [his eyes], there's no human being, there's no humanity.'
Still, Goncalves remained determined to decimate Kohberger, who has dominated headlines since the November 2022 murders of Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin in their off-campus Moscow, Idaho, home.
'There was nothing that was going to make me back down from the moment … and all I felt was rage, almost from the very, very beginning,' she said.
'My whole purpose of that speech was taking back this power,' she said. 'It's been focused around him, his name, his actions … but in my shoes, it pisses me off at times. They have names: Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, Ethan Chapin. Say it.'
Goncalves savaged the monster as a 'sociopath' and even ordered him to 'sit up straight,' in the courtroom.
'You want the truth? Here's the one you'll hate the most: If you hadn't attacked them in their sleep, in the middle of the night like a pedophile, Kaylee would have kicked your f – king ass,'
'Disappointments like you thrive on pain, on fear, and on the illusion of power. And I won't feed your beast,' she told Kohberger
'Instead, I will call you what you are: Sociopath. Psychopath. Murderer,' she said, adding, 'Sit up straight when I talk to you.'
Goncalves said her father's remarks, which came before her own and 'shifted' the energy of the courtroom, gave her the strength to deliver her own.
'I feel like my dad spread his wings so I could fly,' she said. 'I basically said, screw it. You felt confident in this, you've worked hard on this, you're going to get up there and you're going to do this.'
'I was ready to stand on business,' she said.
At one point during her victim impact statement, Kohberger appeared to take sick pleasure in the verbal lashing — flashing a slight grin at Alivea.
Other than that brief moment, he wore a blank expression on his face through the entire proceeding despite Alivea's powerful statement.
When it came time for the failed PhD criminology student to speak — and potentially answer the question every family member was asking: why he did it — Kohberger stayed silent.
When a judge asked him if he had any comments, Kohberger stood and said, 'I respectfully decline.'
Kohberger, 30, was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole or appeal at the hearing.
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‘Pure evil': Epstein survivors and their families horrified as co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell suddenly framed as a ‘victim'
‘Pure evil': Epstein survivors and their families horrified as co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell suddenly framed as a ‘victim'

News.com.au

time30 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

‘Pure evil': Epstein survivors and their families horrified as co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell suddenly framed as a ‘victim'

Multiple victims of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell have expressed their disgust at suggestions she could receive 'preferential treatment' from the government, or perhaps even a presidential pardon. They are increasingly, palpably worried that Maxwell's monstrous crimes, particularly those committed against underage girls, are being forgotten. Maxwell, who has never admitted to her role in Epstein's sex trafficking scheme, was the person chiefly responsible for procuring minors for him to abuse. She enticed them into his orbit, groomed them, and used various methods to keep them trapped. The victims have long alleged that Maxwell also participated in the sexual abuse. Last month, as the Trump administration struggled to neutralise a public backlash against its handling of the Epstein files, the man Donald Trump had appointed Deputy Attorney-General – his own former defence lawyer, Todd Blanche – went to visit Maxwell. Mr Blanche spoke to Epstein's partner and chief co-conspirator for two days. Lawyers representing Maxwell, who are currently trying to get the Supreme Court to throw out her convictions on child sex trafficking charges, later said she had discussed about a hundred people connected to the Epstein case. Obvious fears arose among Maxwell's victims. Did the government intend to seek a shortening of her 20-year prison sentence in exchange for her co-operation? Was President Trump open to pardoning her, which would set her free immediately? And how would the obvious conflicts of interest be navigated? Mr Trump, who was friends with Epstein and Maxwell for about 15 years and whose name reportedly appears 'multiple times' in the Epstein files, wants to be absolved of any suggestion he was involved in their crimes (and, we should note, there is at the moment no evidence he was). Maxwell, obviously, wants to get out of jail, something she almost certainly cannot achieve without Mr Trump's grace. Every incentive compels her to be, ahem, helpful to the President. And this is someone with a long record of lying, including while under oath. Perhaps nothing is amiss, but the ingredients for a potentially corrupt quid pro quo are there. You can understand why Epstein's survivors are suspicious. Two other elements have fed into their building unease. First, on the fringes of America's right-wing media, some bloviaters have started to speak of Maxwell as a 'victim'. 'I think this is great,' Newsmax anchor Greg Kelly said last week, for example, referring to the government's overtures towards her. 'I do have a feeling that she just might be a victim. She just might be. There was a rush to judgment, there was a lot of chaos there for a while. 'Granted, she hung out with Jeffrey Epstein, and I know that's apparently not good.' Apparently! (Oh, and Maxwell did much more than merely 'hang out' with Epstein, as we shall explore in a moment. Apparently some folks need to be reminded.) Second, today we learned that the government had quietly moved Maxwell from her jail in Florida to a lower security one in Texas, which houses several female celebrity inmates. The fraudster Elizabeth Holmes is there, for example. Why move Maxwell? That has not been explained. Hence an angry statement released today, co-signed by Annie and Maria Farmer, both of whom were victims of Epstein and Maxwell, plus the family of Virginia Giuffre, who did so much to expose the pair's crimes before taking her own life earlier this year. 'It is with horror and outrage that we object to the preferential treatment convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell has received,' the statement reads. 'Ghislaine Maxwell is a sexual predator who physically assaulted minor children on multiple occasions, and she should never be shown any leniency. 'Yet, without any notification to the Maxwell victims, the government overnight has moved Maxwell to a minimum security prison. This is the justice system failing victims right before our eyes. 'The American public should be enraged by the preferential treatment being given to a pedophile and a criminally charged child sex offender. 'The Trump administration should not credit a word Maxwell says, as the government itself sought charges against her for being a serial liar. 'This move smacks of a cover-up. The victims deserve better.' Some other remarks worth mentioning, here. 'My little sister is one of her victims, and so am I,' Maria Farmer told MSNBC, slamming politicians who 'want to entertain Ghislaine Maxwell' and 'act like we victims should not be heard from'. Her sister Annie told The Daily Mail any deal between the government and Maxwell would 'be devastating' and 'feel like a slap in the face'. 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I remember looking at Ghislaine, and she had this evil smirk on her face. She knew I was there to be raped, and she enjoyed it.' Speaking to CNN this week Ms Giuffre's brother, Sky Roberts, said Maxwell 'deserves to rot in prison, where she belongs'. 'Because of what she's done to my sister, and so many other women. It's absolutely a pure sense of evil,' Mr Roberts said. 'She wasn't stolen. She was preyed upon,' he added, alluding to Mr Trump's complaint this week that Epstein 'stole' staff from his Mar-a-Lago resort, including Ms Giuffre. '(Maxwell) wasn't just a recruiter. She participated, and viciously participated, with these girls, abusing them.' He said his sister described Maxwell as a 'monster' from 'a nightmare'. Journalist Tara Palmeri, who has reported extensively on the Epstein case and knows multiple victims, described recent events as 'infuriating'. 'Because I know so much about her. I know the damage she did to these girls,' Ms Palmeri said on her YouTube channel. 'So many of them are more angry with her, for the abuse, than Epstein. She was the one that violated them. She was the one that called Annie Farmer's mother and said, 'Don't worry, I'll take care of her, you can let her go to the ranch.' That was where Ghislaine Maxwell was the first one to touch Annie, and then Epstein jumped in. 'She was involved in the actual molestation of these girls. She didn't just bring them to Jeffrey Epstein.' All these comments are worth remembering, going forward. Ghislaine Maxwell was not Epstein's sidekick, she was his partner, and is no less culpable. She wasn't pulled into the web of his sex trafficking scheme – if anything, she was chiefly responsible for weaving it. She should not be pitied. Or trusted.

Crime scene declared after 50-year-old man dies from injuries in Brisbane's West End
Crime scene declared after 50-year-old man dies from injuries in Brisbane's West End

ABC News

time5 hours ago

  • ABC News

Crime scene declared after 50-year-old man dies from injuries in Brisbane's West End

A crime scene has been established in inner Brisbane, and police are searching for an alleged offender, following the death of a 50-year-old man. Police say emergency services were called to a unit complex on Ryan Street in West End around 4:30am on Saturday after receiving reports of a man being found unconscious at his home. They say the man, who has yet to be formally identified, was found unresponsive and alone inside a unit with critical injuries. He was later declared deceased at the scene, and the death is being treated as "suspicious", police say. Speaking to the media on Saturday afternoon, Detective Inspector Wayne Francis said first responders had made "valiant efforts" to save him. "It was a very traumatic scene, especially for the first responders ... the police and ambulance [officers] who attended," he said. "I think they did a tremendous job trying to save his life under those conditions." Detective Inspector Francis was unable to provide any further details about the man's injuries. He said police were aware there had been "some occupants" at the unit last night and they were working to identify and speak to all of them. A crime scene has been declared at the unit, although police say there is no ongoing concern to other members of the community in the area. Detective Inspector Francis said it was understood to have been a "targeted" incident, with those involved known to each other. However, he said the "exact nature of the association" was still being determined. Detective Inspector Francis said police anticipate the investigation into the incident will take a number of days, which included the formal identification process. He said police are working "tirelessly" on the case and are urging any witnesses who were in the vicinity of the Ryan Street unit complex "at anytime overnight" to come forward. West End resident Liam Taylor said disturbances in the area were common, although it was mostly relaxed. But apart from those, Mr Taylor said the area was "pretty relaxed". He said he'd been "disturbed" to learn someone had died so close to his home.

8yo boy sexually assaulted in tent while on family camping holiday in Scotland
8yo boy sexually assaulted in tent while on family camping holiday in Scotland

News.com.au

time6 hours ago

  • News.com.au

8yo boy sexually assaulted in tent while on family camping holiday in Scotland

Police believe a man may have spied on an eight-year-old boy at a campsite before launching a sex attack on him as he slept in a tent. They said the suspect fled into the darkness after the child's 'distress' wakened his dad at the beauty spot on the shores of Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands, The Sun reports. A senior officer said the sickening assault in the early hours of Thursday (local time) had been 'hugely traumatising' for the boy and his family, who were tourists on holiday in the area. Detective Superintendent Calum Smith told of suspicions the suspect had been watching the kid before pouncing at Loch Ness Bay campsite in Drumnadrochit, Inverness-shire, as the youngster's parents slept in a tent next to him. During a press conference in Inverness, he said: 'Given the nature of this, there is a suspicion there was an element of observation and planning from the culprit in terms of someone who might have been hanging around that area for a time in the run-up to it.' Describing the incident, Det Supt Smith said: 'The distress of the child was overheard by his father. His father came out of his tent and saw the man leaving his son's tent. 'He fled on foot. The person may have been on the campsite or may have come on to the campsite shortly beforehand. 'We have no knowledge of where he went after the campsite. He was last seen walking away into the darkness and wasn't seen again after that.' The suspect is described as white, bald, around 5ft 10ins and aged between 30 and 50. Appealing for help to trace the suspect, Det Supt Smith went on: 'I'd ask people to think back — have they seen anyone acting suspiciously beforehand or immediately afterwards? 'Are they aware of people in the area who wouldn't have been there normally and who may fit the description of the suspect? Or do they have information to tell us about?' He added: 'It is very, very unusual for this to happen in the Highlands. 'The family are visitors to the area on a camping holiday.' The horror attack, between 12.20am and 1am on Thursday, shocked locals in the scenic area, close to Urquhart Castle. There was a significant police presence around the campsite. Det Supt Smith said a team of around a dozen officers were involved in the investigation. This includes reviewing 'all available' CCTV footage. Detectives and uniformed officers are also quizzing other campers and urged anyone staying in the Drumnadrochit area to come forward. Craig Jones, 40, a bar supervisor at the nearby Loch Ness Inn, said: 'We shut up on Wednesday night at 11pm and I walked home just after that. 'I didn't see anything suspicious or unusual. The police came in the following morning to speak to staff. 'We've not had anyone unusual hanging about here. But you do get a lot of hitchhikers at this time of year.' Blair Mackay, 55, who was in the bar on Wednesday night, added: 'I walked home about 9.30pm and saw nothing. 'Nobody has a clue who this man could be. 'I just hope that the poor wee boy is okay.' Local councillor David Fraser said the attack had 'shocked' the community in Drumnadrochit. He told BBC Scotland News: 'Words cannot describe the impact this event will have had.'

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