
REVEALED: Where Bryan Kohberger ditched the knife he used to slaughter four innocent Idaho students
'By hiding the truth, we're protecting our killers,' Steve Goncalves, father of Kaylee Goncalves, said on CBS News. He is now preparing to deliver a victim impact statement at Kohberger's sentencing.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
21 minutes ago
- The Independent
Virginia Giuffre's family pleads with Trump not to pardon Ghislaine Maxwell
The family of Virginia Giuffre, one of Jeffrey Epstein 's victims, has urged Donald Trump not to pardon the disgraced financier's longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell. As backlash grows over his administration's handling of the Epstein case, Trump told reporters on Monday that he is 'allowed' to grant clemency to Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking minors, adding that he hadn't thought about it. The family of Giuffre, a key survivor of Epstein's sexual abuse who died by suicide in April, said any leniency shown toward Maxwell would be 'one of the highest travesties of justice.' 'The government and the President should never consider giving Ghislaine Maxwell any leniency,' the family said in a statement Wednesday. 'Ghislaine Maxwell is a monster who deserves to rot in prison for the rest of her life for the extraordinary violence and abuse she put not just our sister Virginia through, but many other survivors, who may number in the thousands.' A senior administration official told NBC News that no leniency towards Maxwell is being discussed. The family also noted that Trump said that 'clemency for Maxwell is not something he is even thinking about at this time.' The Giuffres pounced on Trump's claims on Tuesday that Epstein 'stole' the victim from his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach. Aged 16, Giuffre had worked at Trump's resort as a locker-room attendant during the summer of 2000. 'It was shocking to hear President Trump invoke our sister and say that he was aware that Virginia had been 'stolen' from Mar-a-Lago,' they said in the statement. 'It makes us ask if he was aware of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's criminal actions, especially given his statement two years later that his good friend Jeffrey 'likes women on the younger side... no doubt about it.'' Trump denies having any knowledge of Epstein's criminal activity, and the president has never been accused of wrongdoing in connection with the disgraced financier's case. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Wednesday evening that the president kicked Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago for 'being a creep' to female staff. In the statement, the family acknowledged that Giuffre had worked at Trump's Florida resort years before Epstein and Trump allegedly fell out over a real estate deal around 2004, and a year before police began investigating Epstein. However, the family accused Maxwell of having 'preyed upon' Giuffre while she worked at the resort 25 years ago. Giuffre's family told The Atlantic on Wednesday that the Epstein victim's work at Mar-a-Lago was meant to be a fun summertime job, but instead led to her being sex trafficked. For more than a decade, the Epstein case has been a subject of intense public interest, amid speculation that high-profile public figures who had ties to the financier may have been involved in – or had knowledge of – his sex-trafficking network. The Trump administration has been facing backlash after the Justice Department and FBI said in a memo released earlier this month that there was no client list of Epstein's associates who may have participated in his crimes. It also noted that Epstein did indeed die by suicide in his jail cell in 2019. Giuffre's family noted in its statement that they and the public are demanding answers about the case and that 'survivors deserve this.' In what Democrats are calling a veiled effort to drown out the outrage at the Trump administration's sudden U-turn on the files, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche met with Maxwell privately for nine hours last week. Last week, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee subpoenaed Maxwell, leading her to signal that she would testify to Congress if granted immunity. Giuffre's family warned Maxwell had already been convicted for lying under oath and said she 'will continue to do so for as long as it affects her position.' The committee quickly rejected Maxwell's proposal, stating through a spokesperson that immunity will not even be considered.


The Independent
21 minutes ago
- The Independent
Pakistan jails opposition leader and other senior figures from Imran Khan's party on ‘terrorism' charges
A Pakistani court has sentenced some of the most senior figures from Imran Khan 's opposition party to 10 years in prison for their involvement in anti-government protests in 2023. Those sentenced on Thursday – and therefore immediately disqualified from serving in parliament – include the leader of the opposition in the National Assembly, Omar Ayub Khan. A total of 108 officials from Mr Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party were jailed by an anti- terrorism court in Pakistan 's Faisalabad city. Other prominent figures who were sentenced include Shibli Faraz, Hamid Raza and Zartaj Gul according to Pakistan 's leading daily newspaper Dawn. The case relates to the unrest that gripped Pakistan on 9 May 2023 when supporters and workers from PTI staged major protests over Mr Khan's arrest on corruption charges. The demonstrations ultimately descended into violent riots where military infrastructure and other state-owned buildings were vandalised. At least 10 people died in the capital Islamabad and in the aftermath around 4,000 people were arrested. Mr Khan's supporters, who accused the country's powerful military of orchestrating his 2022 ousting as prime minister through a no confidence vote, targeted an airbase, multiple cantonments, the residence of a senior general, and the army headquarters. Thursday's verdict by the anti-terrorism court is the latest in a wave of prosecutions targeting PTI members and the party's most senior leadership. Mr Khan himself has remained in jail for almost two years. Thursday's verdict came a week after the same court convicted and sentenced eight PTI members, including officials from the party's previous provincial government in Punjab such as Yasmin Rashid, Ejaz Chaudhry, Mehmoodur Rashid and Umar Sarfraz Cheema, to 10 years in jail. Mr Khan faces a separate trial on similar charges, with prosecutors accusing him and fellow PTI party leaders of instigating the unrest that saw protesters attack government and military sites. In a statement on the latest convictions, PTI said that it was a 'sad day for democracy', stating that the party's leaders have been 'unjustly targeted in the false flag operation of 9 May'. As a result, PTI said, the sentenced opposition leaders in both houses of the National Assembly stood disqualified, 'paving way for more members in both houses using precipitous measures to have members elected, from the government side'. 'All this in the name of 9 May incident, based on testimony from the police officers who had supposedly hid under the table, with a disguise, heard the former prime minister Imran Khan, plotting a scheme to incite violence once he's arrested,' the statement read. Mr Khan, 72, was bailed later in 2023 but then rearrested on 5 August that year. He faces around 150 charges, ranging from corruption to terrorism, some of the most serious of which have already been thrown out by the courts. His party claims all the cases filed against him are politically motivated.


Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Jealous ex who stabbed father-of-six to death in drug-fuelled rage when she found his Tinder profile on Christmas Day is jailed
A jealous ex who murdered a father-of-six after she found his Tinder profile on Christmas Day has been jailed. Kirsty Carless, 33, plunged a knife into 31-year-old Louis Price's heart in the early hours of December 25, 2024, in an attack fuelled by cocaine and alcohol. She had been drinking double vodka and cokes with a male friend at the pub before going back to his home to have sex multiple times. At around 1.30am on Christmas Day, a friend sent her a screenshot of Mr Price's Tinder profile. In a furious rage Carless armed herself with a kitchen knife and ordered a taxi to his parents' house to confront him. Harrowing CCTV footage shows Carless storming up towards the house and 'stalking' Mr Price around the garden while menacingly waving the knife towards his face. Seconds later the taxi driver heard a 'very loud and prolonged' scream before Carless emerged for the house 'anxious and sweating' after leaving Mr Price to die on the conservatory floor. Carless then went to her parents house where she admitted what she had done and called 999. Bodycam footage of her arrest shows the remorseless killer sitting on a sofa as a police officer places her in handcuffs. Carless pleaded guilty to manslaughter but denied murdering her ex, instead claiming he had taken money from her and planned to destroy the caravan he was living in. She has now been jailed for life with a minimum of 25 years after she was convicted of murder and possessing an offensive weapon in a public place. She was also found guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm over a previous incident, but cleared of intentional strangulation.