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If Not For This One Mistake, Kohberger 'Would Have Killed Again': Howard Blum

If Not For This One Mistake, Kohberger 'Would Have Killed Again': Howard Blum

Forbes4 days ago
On "Forbes True Crime," Howard Blum, author of "When the Night Comes Falling: A Requiem for the Idaho Student Murders," gave a comprehensive interview about his investigation into the case against murderer Bryan Kohberger, who killed four students at the University of Idaho in 2022, and faces sentencing on Wednesday.
Watch the full interview above.
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Bryan Kohberger was formally sentenced to four life terms in prison without parole this week for the brutal 2022 murders of University of Idaho students Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves. "He's going to stand up with the belly chains and leg irons he's wearing, he's going to be escorted into the custody of Idaho Department of Correction, and the door will close behind him forever," Latah County Prosecutor Bill Thompson said of Kohberger at the sentencing. Kohberger, a former criminal justice graduate student, is expected to serve out his sentence at Idaho Maximum Security Institution, known as IMSI, CBS affiliate KBOI reports. It is the state's only maximum security prison. IMSI houses several notorious inmates and has been plagued by reports of violence, hunger strikes and allegations of inhumane conditions in recent years. Here's what to know about the prison. 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Last summer, dozens of inmates at IMSI refused to eat for six days over numerous grievances, the Idaho Statesman reported, and earlier this month, nearly 90 inmates planned to stage hunger strikes to protest "inhumane conditions" at the prison, according to the paper, The corrections department described it as "a planned, peaceful demonstration" over access to visitation and programming. Kohberger took a plea deal earlier this month that spared him a possible death penalty. He'll be living alongside all of Idaho's eight male death row inmates at IMSI, according to the Idaho Department of Corrections. Among those prisoners is Thomas Creech, a serial killer who's been locked up for half a century. Creech, who was convicted of five murders in three states and suspected of several more, had his scheduled execution halted by a judge last November after his first lethal injection attempt was botched earlier in 2024. Another serial killer incarcerated at ISMI, Gerald Pizzuto, is awaiting execution for two murders in Idaho in 1985. That same year, Pizzuto killed two other people in Washington state after being released from prison in Michigan for rape. Kohberger will also be at the same facility that houses condemned killer Chad Daybell. The husband of "Doomsday mom" Lori Vallow Daybell was convicted of first-degree murder of his first wife and two of his then-girlfriend Lori Vallow's children, Joshua "JJ" Vallow and Tylee Ryan, in a case that made national headlines. Chad Daybell was sentenced to death last June, nearly a year after Lori Vallow Daybell was sentenced to life in prison. Police files on the quadruple murder case that were released by the Moscow, Idaho, police department Wednesday night shed some light on Kohberger's life behind bars since the killings. 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