The trial won’t be for a few months, but many following the case are already asking the question… will Bryan Kohberger face the death penalty for the brutal murders of four University of Idaho students??
05.01.2023 - 22:09 / perezhilton.com
Accused murderer Bryan Kohberger reportedly ranted loudly, taunted guards, and tried to expose himself to female inmates during his days sitting in a Pennsylvania jail cell while awaiting extradition back to Idaho.
As we’ve been reporting, Kohberger has been accused of murdering four University of Idaho students at their off-campus residence back in mid-November. The 28-year-old criminology graduate student was arrested at his parents’ home in Scranton, Pennsylvania late last month after police and the FBI tracked him to the area following a cross-country drive home he’d taken with his father.
After the arrest, Kohberger was placed in a cell in Scranton’s Monroe County Jail. As cops in Moscow, Idaho got together their extradition documents to move Kohberger back to the small town, cops in Scranton held him in remand. And now, we are getting an idea what it was like for him — and others — inside that jail.
Related: Kohberger Had A Creepy Connection To A World-Famous Serial Killer…
An inmate named Valerie Cipollina spoke to DailyMail.com about being housed in the same section of the jail as Kohberger. Cipollina is a 50-year-old woman who was arrested on New Year’s Day on a domestic violence charge after allegedly getting in a fight with her boyfriend. Cops took her to Monroe County Jail, too, where Kohberger had already been detained. While Cipollina’s case was processed into the system, she was placed in a cell across and one over from Kohberger.
For hours as she awaited her release, Valerie was able to see the accused killer fairly close up. She didn’t initially know who he was, but jailers quickly clued her in on his alleged crimes. Shocked at the allegations against the Washington State University student, she observed
The trial won’t be for a few months, but many following the case are already asking the question… will Bryan Kohberger face the death penalty for the brutal murders of four University of Idaho students??
Based on one of the most sensational and much-discussed short stories of recent times, which was heralded as the most-read story ever to appear in The New Yorker, Cat Person is a disarmingly creepy film with a disturbing edge that will surely trigger further discussion about contemporary dating and romantic protocols. Years ago, a little film like this would have found a modest but loyal following among young audiences. Now, however, its forthright presentation of the pitfalls of flashing yellow lights where male-female relations are concerned should make this a must-see and a subject of hot discussion at least among teens and young adults.
In the weeks since Bryan Kohberger‘s arrest, we’ve learned the police had a surprising amount of evidence against the criminology student. But if he really is guilty of the brutal murders of Kaylee Goncalves, Maddie Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin, what was his motive??
It’s looking like a few months before we actually see Bryan Kohberger face trial. But in the meantime we’re still learning so much about the alleged killer’s arrest…
The man accused of killing four University of Idaho students is believed to have messaged at least one of them repeatedly on Instagram in the weeks leading up to the slayings.
As reporters continue to dig into the past of Idaho murder suspect Bryan Kohberger, they’re only finding out more chilling details of the accused murderer’s life…
We’re in for a long wait for the trial of accused murderer Bryan Kohberger. But in the meantime we can learn quite a lot as reporters continue to dig into the life of the criminology grad student.
Ethan Chapin‘s mother is speaking out about how their family has managed to cope with his shocking and senseless death.
We’re in for a long wait for the murder trial of Bryan Kohberger — on Thursday his preliminary probable cause hearing wasn’t scheduled until June! But in the meantime we’re sure to learn a lot more about both the suspect and his alleged victims.
After the first few weeks of the University of Idaho murders, we were resigned to a lengthy wait before a suspect was even named. The arrest of Bryan Kohberger on December 30 was a genuine surprise — a rather reassuring one. But now that he’s in custody, the wheels of justice have slowed way back down again…
In the couple weeks since Bryan Kohberger‘s arrest, we’ve seen a mountain of evidence the cops gathered before taking him in. But does his behavior during his arrest make you even more suspicious?
One of murder suspect Bryan Kohberger‘s neighbors in Pullman, Washington claims the alleged killer asked if they’d heard about the University of Idaho student murders in the days after they happened.
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
As it turns out, Bryan Kohberger — the man accused of killing those four University of Idaho students back in mid-November — is apparently not associated with infamous serial killer Dennis Rader.
Camille Vasquez, who gained notoriety as one of Johnny Depp’s lawyers in his defamation case against ex-wife Amber Heard, has joined NBC News as a legal analyst.
One of the families of the University of Idaho murder victims is defending the surviving roommate who saw the suspect and didn’t immediately call 911.
When an arrest was made last week in the University of Idaho murders, it came as such a shock we really had no idea how the police even found this guy. But after the release of the probable cause affidavit on Thursday, we now know the Moscow PD and FBI found a MOUNTAIN of evidence.
Last week we were pleasantly surprised when police went from no known suspect at all to making an arrest in the University of Idaho murder investigation.
The murders of University of Idaho students Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, Ethan Chapin, and Maddie Mogen shocked the entire nation, people who’d never even met these young people. But there’s one stranger who was struck particularly personally: her name is Kerri Rawson.