
Bryan Kohberger's Tinder messages made woman ‘uncomfortable,' police report says
A woman who matched with Kohberger on Tinder claimed he asked her about the 'worst way to die' and mentioned a Ka Bar knife, the brand linked to the murders.
Another woman, a dancer, reported that Kohberger spoke about 'wanting to kill people' during a private dance in 2018-2019, making her uncomfortable.
Professors at Washington State University discussed an 'intervention' regarding Kohberger's inappropriate interactions with female students, according to text messages and a former teaching assistant.
These revelations emerged after Kohberger was sentenced to four consecutive life sentences for the murders of Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin in November 2022, with his motive still unknown.

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Daily Mail
5 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Kaylee Goncalves' dog had creepy encounters with mystery figure in woods weeks before Idaho murders
Kaylee Goncalves' dog appeared to be lured to the woods twice in the weeks before she and three other University of Idaho students were brutally murdered at home. Goncalves and some of her friends were in the patio of the Moscow home sometime in 2022 when her dog Murphy ran into the bushes and had to be called back several times before he returned, an unidentified woman told police. A different woman told investigators that it was unlike the dog to not return when called, and that Goncalves and the others were concerned someone was in the woods behind the house. Then two weeks before the murders, during a Halloween party, the victims were in their patio when Murphy again ran to the trees behind the house and did not come back for a while. The woman told police they also heard what they believed was someone walking through the wooded area. They did not see anyone, but the dog's behavior was enough to make them go inside and lock the door. The same unnamed woman told police that during this time, she and Goncalves returned to the home and found Murphy gone, and the sliding door opened, The Spokane Spokesman-Review reported after new files about the murders were released. However she added that it was not uncommon for friends of the victims who did not live in the home to come and go freely when no one was home. The incidents prompt the question of whether killer Bryan Kohberger, 30, could have had previous contact with Murphy. That may explain why the pet allowed Kohberger to slip into the student home undetected before the November 2022 murders. The new information was included in files released by the Moscow Police Department after Kohberger was sentenced to life in prison last week without the possibility of parole for the murders of Goncalves, Maddie Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin. The new files also revealed that a woman who lived near the home told called police four months after the murders to say she was '92 percent sure' she had seen Kohberger walking by her house in August or September, 2022. The woman said the man 'looked nervous' and he had curly hair and a large nose. She added that in June or July of 2022 she had seen a white sedan parked near her mailbox for over an hour. The man reportedly drove away after a neighbor asked if he needed help. Moreover, Goncalves told her roommates she saw a man she didn't recognize staring at her when she took her dog outside in the weeks before the murders. Another time, the residents came home to find the door open, loose on its hinges. They grabbed golf clubs to arm themselves against a possible intruder. Then, on November 4, nine days before the attack, the roommates came home at 11 a.m. to find the door open, loose on its hinges, as the wind blew. It remains unclear whether the strange happenings had anything to do with the killings. But the documents do illustrate the frenzied efforts by law enforcement to follow every possible lead to find and convict Kohberger. Officers eventually identified Kohberger — a doctoral student in criminology at nearby Washington State University — using a DNA sample found on a knife sheath at the crime scene. They tracked his movements that night with cellphone data, obtained online shopping records showing he had purchased a military-style knife, and linked him to a car that repeatedly drove by the students' house. Kohberger was arrested at his parents' home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania, about six weeks after the killings. He was taken to a state police barracks to be interviewed by officers from the Moscow police department, Idaho State Police and the FBI. They chatted about the Washington State football team, Kohberger's doctorate studies in criminal justice, his required duties to be a teaching assistant while in college, and why he wanted to become a professor. Kohberger eventually said he understood they were engaging in small talk, but he would appreciate if the officers explained what they wanted. One detective told him it was because of what had happened in Moscow. Asked if he knew what had transpired, he replied, 'Of course.' Did he want to talk about it? 'Well, I think I would need a lawyer,' Kohberger replied. He continued speaking, though — asking what specific questions they had and asking if his parents and dog were OK following his arrest. Kohberger finally said he would like to speak to an attorney, and police ended the interview because he had invoked his Fifth Amendment right.


Daily Mail
35 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Forensic psychologist compares Kohberger to Bundy
Bryan Kohberger was driven by an extreme desire for control and notoriety rather than a blind hatred of women, forensic psychologist Dr Gary Brucato has told a new Mail podcast. Speaking to journalist and host Laura Collins, the violent crime expert saw shades of infamous serial killer Ted Bundy in Kohberger's murder of four college students in their rental home in Moscow, Idaho. Dr Brucato contrasted Kohberger's 'evil' psychosexual fantasies with the extreme misogyny that drove infamous incel murderer Elliot Rodger. Kohberger, 30, was charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary for the November 2022 killings but controversially accepted a plea deal in July 2025 to avoid the death penalty. Asked whether the victims' families' heartfelt statements at the sentencing would have any effect on Kohberger, Dr Brucato said he feared that for killers like him, such public grief becomes part of their fantasy. 'The families' approach was to try and get under his skin,' Dr Brucato said. 'But we must think about the kind of person this is, and I am afraid to say, he was like an automaton during those statements. 'Like a calculating machine – I wondered while he was sitting there he wasn't reliving in his mind what he had done, fantasising.' Brucato went on to describe Kohberger as a 'textbook serial killer' whose motivations, like Ted Bundy's, centred on control interwoven with sexual desire. Both killers were educated and superficially charming, the forensic psychologist observed, using their intelligence to carefully plan attacks on young women driven by fantasies of domination rather than obvious rage. Kohberger's interest in Bundy was well-documented - court documents reveal he had undertaken several Google searches on the serial killer before the murders took place. 'Control is really what this story is all about', Dr Brucato argued. 'Everything, even including this plea deal, seems to be about control. That's precisely why we feel so dissatisfied. 'Here's somebody who was arbitrating who lives and who dies, and ultimately managed to live himself, that's depressing. 'Kohberger is quite easy to figure out. His motives, as demonstrated in what was on the ground, are fairly classic. 'There are clues that this was psychosexual. Kohberger was viewing deeply disturbing pornography – and he clearly idolised sexually motivated serial killers. 'The greatest clue was that he purchased the knife months before there was even a victim selected. 'That means you have a fantasy, then you go out like a casting agent to find a person you can cast in your fantasy. 'A representative of the group he felt rejected by. Attractive young women – he homed in on a specific victim who was representative of that whole group.' Brucato said that the lack of personal relationship between Kohberger and his victims is particularly reminiscent of Bundy. 'A serial killer doesn't want a direct connection with his victim', the forensic psychologist said. 'There's a story about Ted Bundy that he once picked up a potential victim and she started talking too much about her life, her identity – that he dumped her because it was too difficult to project onto her.' Some media outlets initially compared Kohberger to incel killer Elliot Rodger, the 22-year-old who murdered six people in California in 2014 out of hatred toward women who rejected him. But asked by host Collins whether he sees validity in the comparison, Dr Brucato said Kohberger was more 'imitating Bundy' and doesn't meet the 'definition of an incel'. 'Bundy is much more of what Kohberger aspired to be', he told the podcast. 'The in-control person who knows how to use empathy to manipulate people. 'What you see in Kohberger was more that, when women would get near him, he wouldn't know what to do. 'If he ever got in an intimate moment, he would shut the woman down or condescend them or say something weird. 'He told a woman he went on a date with that he would like to tickle her, that she had great birthing hips. 'That's very different to an incel. An incel doesn't even get the opportunity.' To listen to the full episode featuring Dr Gary Brucato's in-depth analysis, search for 'On The Case: The Idaho Murders' now, wherever you get your podcasts.

Rhyl Journal
an hour ago
- Rhyl Journal
Jury retires to consider verdicts in Christmas Day stabbing murder trial
Kirsty Carless, 33, is accused of plunging a knife into 31-year-old Louis Price's heart in the early hours of December 25 2024 in an attack 'motivated by anger and jealousy, and fuelled by cocaine and alcohol' after a friend sent her a picture of his Tinder profile, Stafford Crown Court heard. Prosecutors allege Carless, of Haling Way in Cannock, Staffordshire, took a kitchen knife in a taxi from her home to Mr Price's parents' address in Elm Road, Norton Canes, where she expected to find him with a woman. CCTV showed Carless running up the front path into the house and then 'stalking' him around the garden before he was later found with a single stab wound to the chest on the conservatory floor. The court was told Carless had called Mr Price 45 times between 2.15am and 2.44am while she waited for the taxi to take her to his address and called the cab company two more times during that time to find out where it was. She is said to have asked the taxi driver to wait outside while she went in the property to stab Mr Price at around 3am, before fleeing minutes later in the cab to her parents' address, where she was arrested. Father-of-six Mr Price had been considered by police to be 'at very high risk of domestic abuse' and Carless was on police bail at the time of the fatal stabbing after allegedly strangling Mr Price on November 11 2024. In her evidence to the trial, Carless said she had no recollection of stabbing him, was 'not a violent person' and had only gone to Mr Price's address as she believed he had taken money from inside a card she had in her home. She said she picked up a knife with intent to destroy the caravan he was staying in in his parents' back garden and had 'panicked' after Mr Price was stabbed and fled. She denies murder and possession of an offensive weapon in a public place in relation to the fatal stabbing, and intentional strangling and assault occasioning actual bodily harm in relation to the incident in November. The jury were sent out to start their deliberations by judge Mr Justice Choudhury at 11.41am on Monday.