Yes, a no brainer imo. Pretty sure this is the approach that the state will take if this sample comes into evidence which it should. Plus other stuff to do with lab priorities etc. JmoLots of parties, bloody nose, rough housing on the stairs.
Yes, a no brainer imo. Pretty sure this is the approach that the state will take if this sample comes into evidence which it should. Plus other stuff to do with lab priorities etc. JmoLots of parties, bloody nose, rough housing on the stairs.
I think there may be prints in other places, but it does seem odd that there would be none before or after the one referenced in the PCA. Someone here a while ago speculated he may have stopped by DM's door and leaned in to listen for someone there and that makes a lot of sense to me. If he heard someone (XK) while he was on the third floor, he may have stopped in front of DM's door on the way down and leaned in to listen, putting extra weight on that one foot to leave a print. The defense pointed out that the print was closer to the door than DM reported him to be and that it was not positioned toward the sliding glass door. The speculation about him stopping there and leaning in would explain that as well.You might be right that the judge is wrong--but he likely knows more about the evidence than either of us do. Your opinion that there were lots of bloody prints found in the house is valid as an opinion but it IS only an opinion.
I do know what latent means. My point is if the scene was so bloody, I wouldn't think "special techniques" would be needed to make a bloody shoe print visible. And while you are right one print near the witness's door (BF? I thought it was DM) helps to support her statement, a path of prints passing her door (or even a second print) would be super-supportive. And as you say, the person whose print it was didn't fly there so why weren't there more prints found in that location (per the defense and per the judge.)
MOO
The defense has known about this blood spot since at least late January of this year, as it was addressed in a hearing with Det Payne. If the defense really thought it may have been connected to the murders, they could have petitioned the court to be allowed to have the sample tested, themselves. They would have had six months to get it tested. But they likely know, as almost all of us do, that it has nothing at all to do with the crime, but hope to benefit from telling the jury there was blood there that was unidentified, that could have belonged to the real killer. JMOYes, moo it's a no brainer. Of course BK's defence will insinuate over it for all it's worth on cross and maybe via their own expert during their case in chief. Whatever approach the defense take, the State imo have this case locked down and I have no doubt they will have good rebuttal experts. Moo the jury should have no problem understanding that the unknown DNA extracted from this blood (which at present we know nothing about in terms of amount, age and so forth) is irrelevant to the crime. Jmo
Hopefully voir dire will at least do something to exclude potential jurors who have a tendency to either make up evidence or facts pertaining to trial evidence which are not established. Jmo.
Exactly. The rule of thumb is that it’s better to take more evidence than you need, than not enough - you only get one chance to get it right.I disagree with the BBM portion
Nobody is certain what is relevant evidence and what is not at a crime scene. CSI doesn't make the determination of what is relevant or not. Samples, photos, prints, etc. are all taken from the general crime vicinity and only later, when the rest of the evidence is gathered and reviewed, do investigators begin to determine what is relevant to the crime and what is not. CSI gathers anything that MAY be relevant. Some will turn out to be very relevant, some only marginally, and most completely irrelevant. JMO
Hmm. Not sure how that could work.I think there may be prints in other places, but it does seem odd that there would be none before or after the one referenced in the PCA. Someone here a while ago speculated he may have stopped by DM's door and leaned in to listen for someone there and that makes a lot of sense to me. If he heard someone (XK) while he was on the third floor, he may have stopped in front of DM's door on the way down and leaned in to listen, putting extra weight on that one foot to leave a print. The defense pointed out that the print was closer to the door than DM reported him to be and that it was not positioned toward the sliding glass door. The speculation about him stopping there and leaning in would explain that as well.
JMO
It was the print that put the killer in front of DMs door. That is why that print was mentioned. There very well could have been other prints that were of poor quality. The PCA mentions this print because of location.He stepped in blood. There must have been multiple footprints.
Maybe it was the only usable footprint because it's the only one from which they could lift a usable tread pattern.
JMO
AT said it was one single footprint and no others.It was the print that put the killer in front of DMs door. That is why that print was mentioned. There very well could have been other prints that were of poor quality. The PCA mentions this print because of location.
MOO. . .
The way that could work, if it was positioned that way, is if he didn't leave it when DM saw him, but when he came down the stairs from killing MM and KG. That point in the home is something of a nexus; he would have had to cross through it a minimum of three times.Hmm. Not sure how that could work.
According to everything I've read (example link below) DM opened her door and saw the unknown black-clad man walking towards her. He then walked past her and towards the slider. When could he have "leaned in" to listen at her door if she saw him approaching the door and then saw him approaching the exit? He'd have to have turned around after she closed her door and walked back and then turned around again before leaning in so the footprint would be facing the right way (towards the exit) And with all that walking, there were no other footprints in the area?
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Bryan Kohberger Murder Case: Eyewitness Thought Suspect and Victims Were Partying, Yelled About Noise - Report
A source who had spoken to the eyewitness told NewsNation host Ashleigh Banfield that the eyewitness, who was one of the two surviving roommates living in the home, even yelled at her roommates to keep the noise down.www.insideedition.com
MOO
Where is there evidence that that blood was deposited on 11/13?You have completely misunderstood my post. I was pointing out that it is absurd to even consider that police would be bleeding all over the crime scene. The people that we know of who were in 1122 King Rd that morning were:
DM
BF
HJ
EA
Police
The 4 students exited the house once XK and EC were discovered. LE entered, and discovered all of the victims. From that point on, no one was allowed to enter until CSI got there. The paramedics were turned away. Idaho CSI got there around 3pm and were setting up to go into the scene at 4pm.
There is zero evidence that the blood on the handrail was old or degraded. CSI would not have taken it, if it was. That the sample was taken tells us that CSI considered it part of the crime scene inside 1122 King Rd.
Maybe. It's not clear to me when you are saying he stopped and leaned into DM's closed door to listen & leave the print. Pass 2? But it was only "possible" he had blood on his shoes at that time?The way that could work, if it was positioned that way, is if he didn't leave it when DM saw him, but when he came down the stairs from killing MM and KG. That point in the home is something of a nexus; he would have had to cross through it a minimum of three times.
Pass one: after entering, likely from the kitchen slider, no blood on his shoes, turning to the right up the stairs
Pass two: coming downstairs, possible blood on his shoes, moving forward up the single step into the front half of the middle floor
Pass three: back down the single step, past DM standing behind her cracked open door, likely blood on his shoes, likely dazzled by the neon combined with his VSS, turning back to the right to go through the kitchen and out the slider to exit.
MOO
The reason I say 'possible' for pass two is that if blood from killing the first two girls was contained to the bed and bedding, and if he remained standing rather than climbing into the bed to attack them, his shoes may not have come into contact with their blood.Maybe. It's not clear to me when you are saying he stopped and leaned into DM's closed door to listen & leave the print. Pass 2? But it was only "possible" he had blood on his shoes at that time?
Regardless, I'm not sure that fits with DM's descriptions of noises she heard the previous two times she opened her door. Plus, if he repeatedly passed her door, it does seem there would be multiple prints from passes 2 & 3. Unless there was blood only on pass 3 & that doesn't work with what DM said he did when she saw him on what must have been pass 3.
MOO
I'm thinking maybe when he walked down the stairs after killing MM and KG. He heard something, maybe XK saying someone was there. He comes down the stairs, turns to the right towards DM's door, leans in to listen for someone in that room. He puts weight down on one foot and that's why it shows up, and why the print is closer to the door than DM reported seeing him and why the print is not positioned toward the slider and the exit. He doesn't hear anything, so proceeds to XK's room.Hmm. Not sure how that could work.
According to everything I've read (example link below) DM opened her door and saw the unknown black-clad man walking towards her. He then walked past her and towards the slider. When could he have "leaned in" to listen at her door if she saw him approaching the door and then saw him approaching the exit? He'd have to have turned around after she closed her door and walked back and then turned around again before leaning in so the footprint would be facing the right way (towards the exit) And with all that walking, there were no other footprints in the area?
![]()
Bryan Kohberger Murder Case: Eyewitness Thought Suspect and Victims Were Partying, Yelled About Noise - Report
A source who had spoken to the eyewitness told NewsNation host Ashleigh Banfield that the eyewitness, who was one of the two surviving roommates living in the home, even yelled at her roommates to keep the noise down.www.insideedition.com
MOO
Ok. But if I'm understanding your "3 passes" the latent shoeprint must have been left on pass #2. Right? So the blood had to be more than possible. It couldn't have been left on pass #1-- nobody was dead yet. And pass #3 is problematic for the proposed "leaning in to her door to listen" if we believe DM about what she saw the person doing (coming towards her and then leaving) It's not clear to me how pass #2 works in terms of the direction of the footprint, but I may be misunderstanding your description of pass #2.The reason I say 'possible' for pass two is that if blood from killing the first two girls was contained to the bed and bedding, and if he remained standing rather than climbing into the bed to attack them, his shoes may not have come into contact with their blood.
Unlike with XK, who was found on the floor, and possibly EC too, depending on what source you read (I've read both bed and floor, I don't know which is accurate). Attacking XK at a minimum while she was standing or struggling against him presents the opportunity for blood to fall on his shoes, or onto the floor to be stepped on. In my opinion, it's highly likely he stepped in XK's blood, and that's what was found by crime scene technicians.
But it's not out of the realms of possibility that the blood was from any of the victims, or was a mixture of blood from some or all of them. It would have been an incredibly messy scene.
MOO
Pass two, he would be coming down the stairs, passing in front of DM's door, towards the step up to the front half of the middle floor. He would have passed DM's door with the door on his right and the kitchen on his left. Blood on his shoes, if any, would have been from MM, KG, or both girls. This would not have been when DM saw him.Ok. But if I'm understanding your "3 passes" the latent shoeprint must have been left on pass #2. Right? So the blood had to be more than possible. It couldn't have been left on pass #1-- nobody was dead yet. And pass #3 is problematic for the proposed "leaning in to her door to listen" if we believe DM about what she saw the person doing (coming towards her and then leaving) It's not clear to me how pass #2 works in terms of the direction of the footprint, but I may be misunderstanding your description of pass #2.
MOO
Agree, if it was tested by the defense and ruled out, there would be no “mistake” to point out in the courtroom. It’s a tactic.100% agree @SteveP. AT knows she could’ve requested their own testing on the handrail blood but didn’t want to spend the money and resources knowing it would go nowhere/not lead to the ‘real killer’ as I believe she likely knows the real killer is sitting next to her in court, well lately he’s been sitting a seat or two away from her lol.
At any rate yes I agree, she wants to be able to mention it at trial that it could’ve been left by the ‘real killer’ for reasonable doubt purposes. Defense strategy 101. She can try but I’m sure the state will explain and make clear that the blood on the handrail was collected, investigated and ruled out as having any connection to the crime.
IMHOO