
Former graduate student in court to plead guilty to murders of four Idaho students
Bryan Kohberger, 30, previously pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and burglary charges in a gruesome multiple homicide in 2022 that stunned the small college town of Moscow in northwestern Idaho and drew national media attention.
Relatives of at least two of the victims attended Wednesday's court hearing, which begin at 11 a.m. MT (1 p.m. ET/1700 GMT) in Boise, the Idaho state capital. According to news media accounts, the families are divided on the plea deal.
At the time of the killings, Kohberger was pursuing a PhD in criminal justice at Washington State University in Pullman, Washington, a short distance from Moscow, where the four victims were enrolled as undergraduates at the University of Idaho.
The murders occurred during the early morning hours of November 13, 2022, in an off-campus group house shared by five women.
Three of the roommates - Xana Kernodle, 20, of Avondale, Arizona; Madison Mogen, 21, of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; and Kaylee Goncalves, 21, of Rathdrum, Idaho - were found slain inside the house along with Kernodle's boyfriend, Ethan Chapin, 20, of Conway, Washington.
All suffered multiple stab wounds, according to authorities.

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Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
The moment he knew he'd been caught: Bryan Kohberger's stone-faced glare at arresting officer at his parents home
A never-before-seen image of convicted killer Bryan Kohberger has shown the moment he knew he was caught for the gruesome deaths of four innocent Idaho college students. The 30-year-old criminology Ph.D student murdered Madison Mogen, 21, Ethan Chapin, 20 Kaylee Goncalves, 21, and Xana Kernodle, 20, on November 13, 2022 after sneaking into their home in Moscow. For about a month, police searched for the person responsible - until December 30 when they nabbed Kohberger. The image, which showed the twisted killer donning a stone-faced expression at one of the arresting officers, was taken after authorities stormed his parents' home in Pennsylvania. He looked directly at the camera as he sat down, wearing a black hoodie and black shorts with his hands restrained behind his back. 'I'll never forget - my phone dinged and I looked at it and it said, "We got him,"' Moscow Police Chief Anthony Dahlinger told ABC News. 'The next thing on, there was a picture of him in handcuffs from the scene.' Dahlinger recalled the sense of 'relief' he felt in that moment, adding: 'So being able to share that information with the community, I can only imagine that many of us in the community felt the same when we knew we had him.' Just before his arrest, it appeared Kohberger was 'sorting through garbage, with gloves on,' Idaho State Police Lt. Darren Gilbertson, a lead investigator in the blockbuster case, told the outlet. He was among those who interviewed Kohberger the day of his arrest, as he recalled the murderer being 'expressionless.' Despite his demeanor, which has been on full display since the tragedy made headlines three years ago, Gilbertson said he noticed Kohberger still liked to 'speak to you and teach and enlighten you' during his interview. 'We started with just very general questions about Pullman, about WSU ... he spoke at length about that with us,' the detective recollected. The murderer went on to ask Gilbertson why he was being interviewed, but when he found it was related to the fatal stabbings in Moscow, he stopped talking. 'As soon as we mentioned that, then he stopped, and he said, "I don't want to talk anymore",' Gilbertson said. 'We asked if he was familiar with it, if he knew anything about Moscow, and he said, no ... and stopped right then and said he wanted an attorney.' Kohberger was sentenced to life in prison on July 23 as the victims' families spoke directly to him with their emotional and powerful impact statements. He was handed four life sentences for each death plus 10 more years for the burglary charge related to the murders. He was supposed to stand trial for the deaths that would have seen him possibly get the death penalty, but just weeks before his sentencing Kohberger entered a plea deal. Instead of getting the death penalty, he will now remain locked behind bars for the rest of his life. He is being held in the 'J' block of the Idaho Maximum Security Institution near Boise - the most restricted prisons in the area. Following his sentencing, a trove of investigation documents were released by the Moscow Police Department. Within the lengthy documents, it was sadly revealed how one of the victim's, Goncalves, was so badly injured by Kohberger's knife that she looked 'unrecognizable' by the time he claimed her life. 'I was unable to comprehend exactly what I was looking at while trying to discern the nature of the injuries,' a cop wrote in the files. Goncalves was stabbed a total of 34 times, with many of those wounds left on her face at the student home. Unlike Kohberger's other three victims, who only had stab wounds, Golcalves also suffered blunt force injuries. Another officer on the scene described seeing Kernodle's body in her bedroom covered in blood, with defensive wounds to her hands, including a deep gash between her finger and thumb. She was stabbed more than 50 times. 'It was obvious an intense struggle had occurred,' the officer wrote. 'There was blood smeared on various items in the room and all over the floor.' Kernodle's boyfriend Chapin was found partially covered with a blanket in her bed, with his jugular severed, the police files said. On the floor above, officers found the bodies of Mogen and Goncalves. Mogen had wounds to her forearm, hands and a gash from her right eye to her nose. Both were covered in blood, which had soaked the pink blanket they were sharing. Kohberger left behind a Ka-Bar leather knife sheath next to Mogen's body. DNA on the clasp was traced back to the killer using Investigative Genetic Genealogy.


Daily Mail
10 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Family of Ethan Chapin break silence after Kohberger's sentencing
By The family of Idaho murders victim Ethan Chapin have spoken out for the first time since Bryan Kohberger was jailed for life for slaughtering their son and his three friends inside a college home. Chapin's parents Jim and Stacy Chapin and triplet siblings Maizie and Hunter chose not to attend Kohberger's sentencing at Ada County Courthouse in Boise last week or share a victim impact statement to be read on their behalf. Instead, they planned to spend the day together as a family honoring the 20-year-old freshman at their home in Priest Lake, Idaho. Now, one week on, the Chapin family has released a separate statement on Instagram voicing their support for the outcome of the case and paying tribute to their son who 'touched so many lives.' 'We've given a lot of thought to what we should say since 7/23 and have edited this a million times,' they said, alongside a series of photos of the family together. 'The entire situation has been a tough pill to swallow but at the end of the day, we believe the outcome is the right one.' Earlier this month, the Chapins voiced their support for a plea deal which saw Kohberger plead guilty to the murders of Chapin, his girlfriend Xana Kernodle, both 20, and 21-year-old best friends Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves. In the early hours of November 13, 2022, Kohberger broke into the off-campus student home at 1122 King Road in Moscow and stabbed the four victims to death. The 30-year-old criminology PhD student was arrested around six weeks later on December 30, 2022, at his parents' home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania, where he had gone for the holidays. After spending more than two years fighting the charges, Kohberger finally confessed to his crimes during a change of plea hearing on July 2. That was the only court hearing the Chapin family attended in the killer's case, as a show of support for the plea deal. On July 23, Judge Steven Hippler handed Kohberger four life sentences with no possibility of parole for each count of first-degree murder and an additional 10 years for burglary. Under the terms of the deal - which spared him from the death penalty - Kohberger has waived his right to ever appeal. In the Chapin family's statement, they did not name or mention the killer but took the moment to thank their son for the 'many ways you brought happiness and light to any situation'. 'Thank you, Ethan. You were only with us for 20 years, but you touched the lives of so many people,' they said. 'From the time you were a baby to when we dropped you off at college, you were an absolute joy and the glue that held our family together. 'We remember your smile, your laugh, how you kept us in check, and the many ways you brought happiness and light to any situation. There will never be another you. There would never have been enough time with you. We love you, miss you, and promise to continue honoring your legacy.' The Chapin family also thanked 'the true heroes in our lives' including the multiple law enforcement agencies and prosecutors who worked on the case, the University of Idaho staff who supported them and the media for sharing their story. The family also thanked everyone who has supported them including the students' friends who 'all have suffered severe loss and trauma.' 'Our incredible extended family, friends, and the communities that continue to lift us up every day. They're our backbone, and we recognize how fortunate and privileged we are to have this ongoing support,' the statement read. 'All of the kids!! Close friends of the triplets, Greek family, and others who were part of this story from the very beginning. 'Although each of their experiences is different, all have suffered severe loss and trauma. We continue to be in awe of their strength, and will continue to support them in any way we can.' Chapin had been in his freshman year at the University of Idaho, where he majored in sports management and was part of the Sigma Chi fraternity. The athletic, outgoing student was dating Kernodle and was staying at her student home on the night of the murders. Stacy told the Daily Mail earlier this month that 'he was the clown of the family and he lifted any room that we were all in'. 'I would say he was the top of the triplet pyramid. All things went through Ethan. He kept us all in check,' she said. She also revealed that the family had made a decision to 'forge ahead' with life in the months after their son's murder. 'My husband Jim and I just made a decision one morning. We were like, OK, we're not getting anywhere. This is not a true measure of success for us and our kids and our family,' she said. 'And so we just decided from that day forward, we'd get up, shower, and forge ahead.' The families of the three other victims delivered emotional victim impact statements during last week's sentencing, where they confronted the man who slaughtered their loved ones while they slept. Goncalves' older sister Alivea Goncalves tore into Kohberger as a 'delusional, pathetic, hypochondriadic loser' and demanded: 'Sit up straight when I talk to you.' 'I won't stand her and give you what you want, I won't give you tears… instead I will call you what you are: sociopath, psychopath, murderer,' as Kohberger looked on intently. She concluded with the fiery comment: 'If you hadn't attacked them in their sleep in the middle of the night like a pedophile, Kaylee would have kicked your [expletive] ass.' Surviving roommate Dylan Mortensen - who came face-to-face with Kohberger moments after he murdered her friends - sobbed uncontrollably as she told him he was a 'hollow vessel' and 'less than human.' While the families and friends voiced their heartbreak, grief and fury at his crimes, Kohberger stared blankly without showing a flicker of emotion or remorse. When it was his chance to speak, he uttered the three words, 'I respectfully decline' - refusing the chance to reveal his motive and leaving the victims' families in the dark about the murders. Despite his guilty plea, many unanswered questions remain, including Kohberger's motive, who his intended target was and why he chose his victims. However, new information is starting to be made public since Moscow Police released a trove of 314 records from the investigation that ultimately led to Kohberger's arrest. Among the revelations are reports from the victims' friends and surviving roommates that there had been a string of disturbing incidents at 1122 King Road in the lead-up to the murders. Goncalves had told friends she had seen a man watching her in the trees around the home and the roommates had come home to find the front door open one day. It is not clear if these incidents are related to Kohberger but cell phone evidence does indicate he was surveilling the home months before the murders. Kohberger is now being held in the Idaho Maximum Security Institution where he will see out his dying days.


Reuters
a day ago
- Reuters
Ukraine's drone attack injures one, sets homes on fire in Voronezh, Russia says
Aug 3 (Reuters) - A woman sustained a leg injury from Ukraine's overnight drone attack on Voronezh that also resulted in several homes and utility buildings catching fire from falling drone debris, the governor of the southern Russian region said on Sunday. Air defence units destroyed about 15 Ukrainian drones over the region, the governor of Voronezh, Alexander Gusev, wrote on the Telegram messaging app. "The threat of further drone attacks remains," Gusev said in the post early on Sunday. Reuters could not independently verify Gusev's report. There was no immediate comment from Ukraine. Both sides deny targeting civilians in their strike in the war that Russia launched with a full-scale invasion on Ukraine in February 2022. Kyiv says that its attacks inside Russia are aimed at destroying infrastructure key to Moscow's war efforts and are in response to Russia's relentless strikes on Ukraine. The Russian defence ministry said that its units destroyed 41 drones just before midnight on Saturday over Russian regions bordering Ukraine and over the waters of the Black Sea.