A professor at the University of Idaho is fighting back after a TikTok sleuth accused her of horrifically murdering Xana Kernolde, Ethan Chapin, Madison Mogen, and Kaylee Goncalves!
06.12.2022 - 02:37 / perezhilton.com
We learned two big things about the University of Idaho murders over the weekend.
Victim Kaylee Goncalves‘ family gave multiple interviews, finally revealing a very good reason why police might suspect she was the intended target: her death was “significantly more brutal” than that of her three friends, Xana Kernodle, Ethan Chapin, and Madison Mogen.
They also admitted to being so frustrated with the Moscow PD‘s handling of the case that they were talking to private detectives about it. One key area of frustration? The elimination of suspicious characters in what they believe was a premature way.
Related: Spared Roommates Break Silence On Murders
One such person was Kaylee’s alleged stalker, a rumor that had been fueled by internet sleuths. Apparently the 21-year-old told friends in mid-October, a month before the killings, about a guy who had followed her around a bit. Apparently she had gone into a local business and drew the attention of two men — then one may or may not have followed her to her car.
It’s a scary thought considering what happened later… but police have ruled both men out. Law enforcement sources spilled to TMZ that the men spoke to police, admitting they were trying to meet women in the establishment. However, there was nothing, cops said, to tie them to the murders.
This matches up with the Goncalves family’s dismissal of the stalker theory. Her father Steve Goncalves told News Nation:
That’s one area they agree with cops so far.
But they did voice frustration in the clearing of suspicious persons. Kaylee’s mother, Kristi Goncalves, said:
Thus far police have cleared:
the two surviving roommates, who were left alone during the attack a man seen in a surveillance video standing near Kaylee and MaddieA professor at the University of Idaho is fighting back after a TikTok sleuth accused her of horrifically murdering Xana Kernolde, Ethan Chapin, Madison Mogen, and Kaylee Goncalves!
Could this new bodycam footage be a new lead for the case of University of Idaho murders?
An attempted murder investigation has been launched by police after a man was attacked in Glasgow’s Merchant City.
Did law enforcement finally make a big break in the University of Idaho murders??
Newly released surveillance video from downtown Moscow, Idaho appears to show two of the four slain University of Idaho students walking with an unidentified man hours before they were murdered.
Another potential lead in the University of Idaho murder investigation??
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
It looks like the Moscow Police Department are making a real effort to increase their transparency after news broke of victims’ families hiring lawyers.
You’ve all heard about the case by now. Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, Ethan Chapin, and Madison Mogen — all students at the University of Idaho — were found brutally stabbed to death in their off-campus housing in Moscow, Idaho back on November 13.
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
A Georgia divorce attorney has been found dead after a client’s ex-husband took issue with their case.
Whoa! One of the families of the murdered University of Idaho students is planning to hire an attorney to force information from police!
A heartbreaking update in the case of Athena Strand‘s tragic death…
Does law enforcement finally have a lead in the murder case of four University of Idaho students?!
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
The man who shot Lady GaGa‘s dog walker in Hollywood early last year has been sentenced to more than two decades in prison in a plea deal.
Was one particular victim the only true target of the University of Idaho killings?
The two University of Idaho students who survived the quadruple homicide at their home spoke out about their roommates’ deaths for the first time.
It’s been nearly three weeks since the shocking quadruple murder at the University of Idaho — and it feels like all the cops have learned is that they don’t know as much as they thought they did.