10 Key Revelations in Idaho Murder Case
MOSCOW, Idaho -- Following weeks of unrest regarding deaths of 4 University of Idaho students in the vicinity of campus, police this week issued their most comprehensive account regarding the inquiry that led to detain a criminology student at a nearby college.

The documents provide a wealth of evidence regarding that suspect Bryan Kohberger, 28 who is a master's student from Washington State University, who told a lawyer he is looking forward to being exonerated. The documents also provide shocking new information about the night four students were killed, and raise new concerns about a murky investigation that has not clarified a motive.

Here are 10 important information that was that were made public on Thursday.

A roommate spotted a mask-wearing man.

Investigators have previously claimed that two of the roommates who were in the home on the night of the incident and who were not attacked were asleep. The evidence shows they both awoke at around 4 a.m. after hearing sounds that a man's voice was heard and crying. This was about the time that the police believe the murders took place.

The roommate, as per the documents, observed from her room when the man dressed in black wearing a mask over his face made his way to the back door of the home. She said she locked her bedroom door at this point but it's unclear in the documents what happened afterwards.

The authorities were not summoned to the site in more than seven hours.

Investigators located an uncut knife at the scene.

In an upstairs bedroom in which two victims -two of them - Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves were discovered dead, police said they discovered a brown leather knife sheath.

The police reported that they could obtain the DNA of an unidirectional snap on the sheath. Later, they discovered a link between that sample and the DNA at Mr. Kohberger's parents' house in Pennsylvania.

It could prove to be an important aspect of evidence, when authorities attempt to connect the suspect Mr. Kohberger to the scene of the crime.

What to Know About the Idaho College Murders

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The search for a suspect has been unsuccessful. Authorities remained silent for several weeks before identifying the suspect, and pleaded with the public to provide information and videos to help determine what caused the incident. On December. 30th, police detained Bryan C. Kohberger, who is a criminology student in the age of 28 from Washington State University, about 10 miles away from Moscow and charged him with murder.

Extradition to Idaho. Mr. Kohberger was detained at his home with his parents within the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania. On January. 4, police transported Kohberger via plane from Pennsylvania and the place where he appeared in court for the first time the previous day the flight to Idaho. In the course of that court hearing, the accused was able to agree that he would be transferred.

The charges. Mr. Kohberger faces four charges of murder in the first degree and one count of burglary that is felony. Authorities are yet to provide the motive or the way in which they have come to the conclusion that he is suspect. He. Kohberger has said he is looking forward to being cleared by his public defense attorney in Pennsylvania.

The suspect applied for a job in the local police department.

He. Kohberger had long taken an interest in criminology as well as criminal law.

He was educated in Pennsylvania under Katherine Ramsland, a forensic psychologist who wrote books such as "The Mind of a Murderer" and "How to Catch a Killer." He was interested in the psychology of criminals as they commit crimes.

While at Washington State University, he was working towards the pursuit of a Ph.D. He was also taking an course on DNA evidence and forensics during the time prior to the killings, as well as continuing to mark papers in the months following.

The authorities also revealed they discovered that Ms. Kohberger had applied in recent months for an opportunity to work with the police department of Pullman, Wash., just 10 miles away of the University of Idaho campus in Moscow. The applicant wrote an essay for the application that expressed his desire to help police departments in rural areas gather and analyze data.

A car drove past the home of the victims a few times.

In the evening of the murders, the investigators stated that a car in white was seen in surveillance footage repeatedly passing through the dead-end road where the victims resided.

The car, which police claimed was the police identified as a Hyundai Elantra, started appearing at around 3:29 a.m. The vehicle drove by this area 3 times, before coming back the fourth time around 4:04 a.m. approximately the time the deceased roommate was awakened , and police believe that the killings took place. The car, police claimed, was seen speeding away from area at around 4:20 a.m.

A dog's bark was recorded.

Around 4:17 a.m. an alarm camera that was located near the house of the victims captured an audio recording that was degraded and sound like a whimper or the sound of a loud thud. Investigators stated. It was also reported that the dog was heard barking several times.

When the murders were discovered the police officers who arrived at the residence discovered a dog inside some of the bedrooms. The dog was owned by One of the victim's, Kaylee Goncalves.

A victim could have been asleep.

The coroner has suggested that the victims were likely asleep during the killings, the investigators have suggested in the court documents that at least one could be awake.

Xana Kernodle was the recipient of the DoorDash delivery at around 4 a.m. Just prior to when the vehicle arrived in the form of a white car police said. An investigation of her mobile also indicated that she was on the TikTok app about 4:12 a.m.

An officer from the campus found Kohberger's vehicle.

With the surveillance footage in their possession, the police began searching the area in search of white Hyundai Elantras and an officer on campus at Washington State University found one in November, which was registered at the address of Kohberger. Kohberger.

Investigators have said that they have reviewed photos of. Kohberger and found that his physical appearance was similar to the memory of the roommate who observed a man inside the house. This included his height, build , and eyebrows with bushy hair.

Police initially stated that they were searching for an 2011-13 Elantra however, they later discovered that it could be an earlier model year, that was released in 2016. Mr. Kohberger had a 2015 Elantra.

Kohberger's cell phone was disconnected in the aftermath of the murders.

At the end of December investigators were able obtain records about the whereabouts that Mr. Kohberger's phone.

The police records revealed that he visited the area of the crime scene on a dozen occasions prior to the night of killings, as stated in the police statement. On the night of murders, his cell phone was on in Pullman in the early hours of 2:47 a.m. The phone was then disconnected from the network.

The phone connected on the Internet at approximately 4:48 a.m. The phone was located at an area of about a mile southwest from the University of Idaho. The phone later returned to Pullman.

The police believe that the suspect might return to the scene of the crime.

After the killings in the early hours of 9:12 a.m. the victim, Mr. Kohberger's cell phone was discovered in Moscow and connected to the cellular network in close proximity to the scene of the crime and remained there for nine minutes according to the police reports.

The phone was then returned to the location of his residence in Pullman. In the morning, nobody was calling 911 and police hadn't yet arrived at the scene of the crime.

An DNA test was collected from a trash bin in Pennsylvania.

In the days following the acquisition of Mr. Kohberger's phone numbers Investigators were in Pennsylvania which is in the state where Kohberger was a resident. Kohberger had driven for the holidays with his dad.

Agents in the area found trash at the residence belonging to the Mr. Kohberger's relatives and transported the trash to Idaho. Investigators claimed they were able to link a DNA profile that was found in the trash with the DNA sample taken from the knife sheath that was found at the scene of the murder. The results, the police claimed, proved that the father of Kohberger was the one who had left DNA on the knife. Kohberger was the father of the person who has left the DNA trace on the knife's sheath.
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