
How to watch Bryan Kohberger doc ‘One Night In Idaho: The College Murders' for free
Just over a week after Idaho college murders suspect Bryan Kohberger accepted a shocking plea deal to avoid the death penalty, a new documentary series about the crime is debuting.
'One Night in Idaho: The College Murders' will premiere on July 11, exclusively on Prime Video. All four episodes will drop at once.
On November 13, 2022, four University of Idaho students — Madison Mogen, 21, Ethan Chapin, 20, Kaylee Goncalves, 21, and Xana Kernodle, 20 — were killed in their off-campus home in the middle of the night. Bryan Kohberger was arrested in connection to the murders on December 30, 2022.
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Now, nearly three years later, Kohberger pled guilty to the murders on July 2, leaving burning questions unanswered and the families of the victims furious after the court claimed they were trying to spare the families of the gory details.
The new docuseries centers on the families and friends of the victims, featuring exclusive interviews with Stacey and Jim Chapin (parents of Ethan), and Karen and Scott Laramie (parents of Mogen).
When does 'One Night in Idaho: The College Murders' come out?
'One Night in Idaho: The College Murders' debuts on Prime Video tomorrow, July 11. All four episodes will drop at 3 a.m. ET.
How to watch 'One Night in Idaho: The College Murders' for free
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If you aren't a Prime Video subscriber yet, you can get started with a 30-day Amazon Prime free trial, including Prime perks like the Prime Video streaming service, free two-day shipping, exclusive deals during Amazon Prime Day (right now!), and more. After the free trial, Amazon Prime costs $14.99/month or $139/year.
All 18- to 24-year-olds, regardless of student status, are eligible for a discounted Prime for Young Adults membership as well with age verification. After six months at $0, you'll pay 50% off the standard Prime monthly price of $14.99/month — just $7.49/month — for up to six years and get all the perks.
'One Night in Idaho: The College Murders' trailer
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Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
Kohberger practiced home invasions and burglary techniques years before murdering Idaho students: new book
Idaho student killer Bryan Kohberger got his first hands-on experience as a burglar while pilfering homes to fund a teenage heroin addiction, according to a new book. "He was a heroin addict as a young guy [in Pennsylvania], and he was breaking and entering into houses," crime novelist James Patterson told Lawrence Jones on "FOX & Friends" Wednesday morning. "He'd been doing it for years, and that's exactly what happened in Moscow. He broke into this house and killed these four beautiful students." Patterson teamed up with investigative journalist Vicky Ward on "The Idaho Four: An American Tragedy," which dropped earlier this week. While Kohberger has no publicly visible criminal record in his home state, he was forced out of a security job for reasons that have not been made public and reportedly has an expunged 2014 conviction for the theft and sale of his sister's iPhone after a stint in rehab to pay for his heroin addiction when he was 19. In 2023, police confirmed to Fox News Digital the case had been expunged and said they had no record of it to share. Kohberger's dad, Michael Kohberger, told police that his son had just gotten out of rehab, swiped the phone and paid a pal $20 to drive him to the mall, where he allegedly sold it for $200, ABC News reported previously. The killer, now 30, was going to face a capital murder trial next month until he unexpectedly changed his plea on July 1, when he admitted to four counts of first-degree murder and one of felony burglary. He acknowledged that he pre-planned the slayings and that when he entered the off-campus rental home at 1122 King Road, he intended to kill. The authors found victims from Kohberger's past in Pennsylvania, where he spent most of his life, who shed new light on his capacity for manipulation and plotting. "I felt chills when Connie Saba told me the story of how a teenage Kohberger had manipulated her into inadvertently telling him when she'd be out of the house to visit her son, Jeremy in jail, because he planned to break into her house and steal an iPad and other things from her," Ward told Fox News Digital. It was a striking betrayal, she said, because Kohberger had next to no friends and Jeremy Saba might have been the only one. "Connie Saba had been nothing but welcoming and kind to him, so it was a devastating breach of trust – and when Connie Saba imitated Kohberger coming back a year or so later to apologize to her for the break-in (as part of his rehab process), she showed me the creepy way he just 'appeared' in her kitchen like a ghost, frightening her," she said. "One could imagine him just 'appearing' at 1122 King Road on the night of the murders." Kohberger cased out the rental home around a dozen times before the murders, according to court documents. Before school officials had it razed last year, it was situated on a slope in front of a parking lot, giving Kohberger a potential vantage point overlooking multiple windows, including those of 21-year-old victim Madison Mogen's bedroom. "Mark Baylis, a former Navy SEAL, believes Kohberger successfully stalked him and his property for hours, days possibly, to steal valuables from him," Ward added. "It showed the cold-blooded, calculated side of Kohberger – a side that I think we all saw in court in early July when he pled guilty – with zero emotion." Kohberger stood up in court, with his back straight, admitting to the murders without a glance at his parents or those of the victims, most of whom were in the room. In the gallery near the defense table, his father wiped away tears and asked a bailiff for water. At one point, even Latah County Prosecuting Attorney Bill Thompson choked down a tear as he wrapped up a summary of the prosecution's case. GET REAL-TIME UPDATES AT THE FOX NEWS TRUE CRIME HUB Throughout the proceeding, Kohberger fixed his eyes on lawyers in the room, the judge, and occasionally leaned over into the ear of his lead defense attorney, Anne Taylor. The 30-year-old was a criminology student at Washington State University, a 10-mile drive from the crime scene. He'd barely been there for one semester but was already worried about losing his scholarship, Patterson revealed. Kohberger had no meaningful connection to the victims, 21-year-olds Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves, and 20-year-olds Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin. But Patterson believes Mogen was the primary target when he snuck into the off-campus home at 1122 King Road on Nov. 13, 2022. She and Kernodle both worked at the now-shuttered Mad Greek restaurant, which had vegan menu options that the author believes appealed to Kohberger's meat-free diet. "He obviously had a big problem with women," Patterson said, based on roughly 300 interviews he conducted and public documents. "We believe he was targeting Maddie and things had happened... He was going to lose his scholarship." Kohberger was pursuing a Ph.D. in criminology at Washington State University – where he reportedly butted heads with other students. After his arrest, the school said it had cut ties. Kohberger's defense did not respond to a request for comment.


New York Post
6 hours ago
- New York Post
James Craig, dentist on trial for wife's poison murder, claims victim was emotionally manipulative, unstable
As prosecutors attempted to paint a Colorado dentist as a calculated killer who poisoned his wife to pursue a new romantic life, the defense took a dramatically different route by portraying his wife of 23 years as emotionally manipulative and mentally unstable. Dr. James Toliver Craig, 47, is charged with first-degree murder in the March 2023 death of his wife, Angela Craig, a 43-year-old mother of six. Her cause of death was determined to be lethal doses of cyanide and tetrahydrozoline. In opening statements Tuesday in Colorado, defense attorney Ashley Whitham acknowledged the couple's rocky 23-year marriage but described Angela not as a victim of betrayal, but as someone who was emotionally broken, deeply private and at times manipulative. 'You're going to hear her own daughter describe her that she was also manipulating words,' Whitham revealed to jurors Tuesday. 'Again, that if she wanted to try to get something, she would be manipulative.' The Colorado couple's marital strife was laid bare in Tuesday's opening remarks. Prosecutors pointed to his relationship with a Texas orthodontist, Dr. Karin Cain, as the motivation for the murder. Cain has not returned Fox News Digital's requests for comment. The defense said the 47-year-old husband had extramarital affairs throughout the couple's marriage. 'Karin Cain was just like the others. This wasn't some new obsession,' Whitham said. 4 Dr. James Toliver Craig is charged with first-degree murder in the March 2023 death of his wife. AP 4 Defense portrayed his wife of 23 years as emotionally manipulative during the trial. AP Along with a series of affairs, Craig also allegedly used the website advertising himself as 'Jim and Waffles' and claiming a net worth of $10 million in search of 'sugar babies.' Whitham described Angela as an 'extremely private' stay-at-home mom of six who, due to her deeply held Mormon faith, was reluctant to share the couple's marital issues. She claimed Angela was isolated and someone who was 'not about to tell people about her marital struggles' and who was 'broken.' Defense attorney Kelly Hyman delved into the dueling strategies as the high-stakes murder trial kicks off. She noted that the defense's strategy to cast Angela as manipulative and unstable plays into their aims to create reasonable doubt and reframe the context. 'By doing so, the defendant implies that [he] wasn't responsible,' she explained to Fox News Digital. 'That could go to the heaty of the defense that Angela killed herself and that it was suicide.' 4 Angela Craig, a mother of six, was poisoned with lethal doses of cyanide and tetrahydrozoline. Summerbrook Dental Group/Facebook While prosecutors argued Tuesday that Craig's alleged Google searches, chemical orders and romantic messages to his alleged mistress amount to premeditation, Hyman warned that speculative interpretation of digital evidence isn't always a slam dunk. Every morning, the NY POSTcast offers a deep dive into the headlines with the Post's signature mix of politics, business, pop culture, true crime and everything in between. Subscribe here! 'A way to do this is to challenge admissibility and the reliability of the digital evidence. This can be done on cross-examination or through a defense witness to counter the digital forensic and timeline reconstruction,' she said. The defense argued Tuesday that investigators operated with 'tunnel vision' and failed to investigate other leads. The defense said Angela's personal laptop was never seized or searched despite prosecutors showing images of her using it from her hospital bed to research symptoms. 'The defense could argue that the unexamined laptop may contain information supporting an alternative theory of events or potentially pointing to another person and/or a different timeline,' Hyman said. 'This omission may suggest an incomplete and/or biased investigation.' Hyman also noted that the absence of direct physical evidence, such as cyanide residue on containers or packaging, could work to the defense's advantage. 4 Craig also allegedly used the website advertising himself as 'Jim and Waffles' and in search of 'sugar babies.' Summerbrook Dental Group/Facebook 'The absence of direct physical evidence like poison residue on the protein shake containers or the victim's body presents a key argument for the defense to use,' she said. Investigators alleged in court documents obtained by Fox News Digital that, in the weeks before his wife's hospitalization and death, Craig used a dental office computer to search for 'undetectable poisons' and how to obtain them, later purchasing arsenic and cyanide by mail, 'how many grams of pure arsenic will kill a human' and 'is arsenic detectable in an autopsy?' Alongside these online searches, investigators alleged Craig made YouTube queries such as 'how to make poison' and 'Top 5 Undetectable Poisons That Show No Signs of Foul Play.' Fox News Digital has reached out to James Craig's lead attorney, Lisa Fine Moses, for comment.

a day ago
New York carriage horse's collapse spurs criminal trial
NEW YORK -- A carriage driver went on trial Tuesday over a horse's collapse on a Manhattan street, in a criminal case that encapsulates years of modern-day strife over an old-timey tourist attraction. Prosecutors say Ian McKeever relentlessly kept driving the horse, Ryder, on an 84-degree (29-degree Celsius) day in August 2022, despite signs that the animal was struggling to pull the carriage before he went down en route back to his barn. 'The defendant chose to press on, business as usual, and overwork Ryder," prosecutor Taylor Maurer told jurors in her opening statement. The horse survived the fall but was euthanized some months later because of health problems. McKeever, 56, has pleaded not guilty to a misdemeanor animal cruelty charge. His attorney says the horse was properly cared for, wasn't overheated, and simply tripped and fell. 'Ryder's fall is heartbreaking, but the evidence in this case is not going to show that Ryder fell because Ian overdrove him,' the lawyer, Raymond Loving, said in his opening statement. Horse-drawn carriages have plied Central Park and the city's streets for over 150 years. Featured in countless movies and TV shows, they're a quaint attraction for many tourists and a cause célèbre for activists who have long wanted them banned. Animal advocates say it's inhumane to have horses navigating Manhattan traffic. Over the years, some horses have gotten startled, run off and collided with cars or other objects. Others besides Ryder have collapsed on the job. Supporters of horse-drawn carriages see the coaches as a romantic remnant of a bygone New York. They also note that the carriages net tourist dollars and have provided hundreds of jobs to drivers, plus jobs for a glut of farm and racing horses. 'If they did not come to New York City, most of these horses would be dead,' McKeever told The Associated Press in 2014. He said some of his own carriage horses were going to go to slaughterhouses before he bought them. Perhaps improbably, horse-drawn carriages became a potent political issue about a decade ago, when mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio campaigned on a promise to eradicate them on his first day in office. The Democrat won in 2013 and got pushback from unions, newspaper editorials and other supporters of horse-drawn carriages. After two years, a compromise plan to limit the carriages' number and range was pulled off the agenda on the eve of a City Council vote. McKeever has been a carriage horse driver for 30 years. His attorney said Ryder belonged to the defendant's brother. The horse was outside for over seven hours on Aug. 10, 2022, mostly in Central Park. An onlooker, Caroline Londahl-Smidt, testified Tuesday that the horse appeared to her to be in 'major distress,' walking slowly up a hill, as McKeever shook the reins and seemed to be trying angrily to speed him up. Later, the horse collapsed near Times Square during the evening rush hour. Bystander video published by the New York Post showed McKeever snapping the reins at him and telling him to get up. Ryder rolled onto his right side and laid on the pavement for nearly an hour, occasionally trying to rise as police cooled him with water and ice from nearby restaurants, according to testimony and body camera video from Sgt. Vincent Fontana of the police department's mounted unit. Officers tucked a pillow under the horse's head to protect his right eye from the pavement. Ultimately, the horse stood, walked into a trailer and was driven back to his stable. Fontana said McKeever told him the animal was 13, but prosecutors say he was considerably older. Through questioning, Loving emphasized that the horse's temperature was normal and his breathing was not much faster than normal when Fontana took his vital signs. He did so after officers had started hosing down the animal.