ID - 4 University of Idaho Students Died in Apparent Homicide, Moscow, 13 Nov 2022 ****Media Thread**** NO DISCUSSION

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The alleged sightings by the three students were not the first time Kohberger made women feel uncomfortable.

The owner of the Seven Sirens Brewing Company in Pennsylvania said Kohberger harassed women at his bar, where he usually sat alone “observing and watching” other patrons until he started drinking.

 
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Heroic Final Act: Idaho Murder Victim Xana Kernodle Had Fingers Severed As She Fought Killer — 'Put Up Fierce Fight'​

"Xana Kernodle put up a fierce fight when the attacker set upon her, repeatedly grabbing the attacker’s knife, so much so that she sustained deep cuts to her fingers and that her fingers were nearly severed," a source familiar with the investigation spilled, noting that Kernodle was the last of the four to be killed.

 
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Idaho murders: Bryan Kohberger's trash may be key in massacre probe​

Bryan Kohberger reportedly threw out trash bags in neighbor's bin after returning to Pennsylvania​

Idaho student murders suspect Bryan Kohberger's Pennsylvania trash could be key evidence in the case against him, according to a former investigator turned criminal justice professor.

The 28-year-old criminology Ph.D. student, who past friends say is a former heroin addict with socially awkward tendencies, is accused of massacring four University of Idahoundergrads as they slept in their off-campus home during the pre-dawn hours of Nov. 13 before slipping out the back door in a mask and dark clothes.

Police were still looking for the murder weapon when Latah County Magistrate Judge Megan Marshall imposed a gag order on Jan. 3.



 
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2/9/23

Bryan Kohberger was fired from his teaching assistant job due to 'behavioral problems' just days before he was arrested for allegedly murdering four University of Idaho students.

Kohberger, 28, was facing disciplinary actions at his Washington State University job before he was ultimately let go on December 19 - just over a month after the four youngsters were found stabbed to death in Moscow. Eleven days later on December 30, Kohberger was arrested at his parents' home in Pennsylvania.

He started the position in August and was put under investigation within a month due to 'behavioral problems' and having a 'sexist attitude toward women,' NewsNation said.
 
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2/12/23

MOSCOW (Idaho Statesman) — The man accused of stabbing four University of Idaho students to death in November has objected to a motion from one of the victims’ families to appeal the gag order in his case.

The objection, filed Thursday, comes less than a week after Shanon Gray, the attorney representing the family of victim Kaylee Goncalves, filed a challenge in state court that said the gag order is too broad and places an undue burden on the families.

In the motion to appeal, Gray said the nondissemination order, commonly known as a gag order, “constitutes an intolerable prior restraint on free speech.”

Bryan Kohberger, 28, faces four counts of felony first-degree murder and a felony burglary charge in the Nov. 13 attack in Moscow that took the lives of Goncalves, 21, of Rathdrum; Madison Mogen, 21, of Coeur d’Alene; Xana Kernodle, 20, of Post Falls; and Ethan Chapin, 20, of Mount Vernon, Washington.

Kohberger’s defense team, Kootenai County public defender Anne Taylor and chief deputy litigator Jay Weston Logsdon, wrote in their objection to the family’s appeal of the gag order that the U.S. Supreme Court has determined certain parties’ First Amendment rights to free speech may be limited when exercising those rights would result in prejudice against the defendant.

The objection also said Kohberger has a right to a “speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury,” which could be threatened by “pretrial expression.”
 
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2/13/23

Bryan Kohberger reportedly was fired as a teaching assistant at Washington State University after it investigated him for run-ins with a professor and his behavior toward women in the weeks leading up to his arrest in the murders of four University of Idaho students.

Kohberger, 28, who was a PhD student at WSU, met with faculty members to discuss his job performance and disturbing behavior with female students, according to the New York Times.

On Sept. 23, 2022, he had a verbal “altercation” with Professor John Snyder, whom he was assisting, according to the termination letter obtained by the newspaper.
 
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