ID - 4 University of Idaho Students Murdered - Moscow # 19

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  • #601
Good idea, but not likely to happen.

Don't most colleges have all rooms deep cleaned before the new semester?
In Colorado my University only did that in the summer after kids went home.
 
  • #602
If one person kills four people with a knife, it's rage.
If more than one person participates, it's payback.
 
  • #603
  • #604
I think kids can get Hunters Safety card and to hunting at 14 y/o.
It might be different for different states. In Minnesota students ages 11 and older can attend a firearms safety certification course and receive their certificate. The firearms safety certificate becomes valid at age 12. Youth 10-13 years of age are permitted to hunt but must be under the direct supervision of a licensed parent or guardian.

 
  • #605
Retired FBI profiler Jim Clemente was actually one of the writers for Criminal Minds, and he was asked about his thoughts and opinions on Fox News a few days ago:


To summarize his thoughts:
- this wasn’t the suspect’s first foray into or around the house
- either he knew one or more of the victims or he’s been stalking one or more of the victims
- had the time to surveil the house at night
- had the time to be there that night to commit the crime
- may have been covering up wounds after the crime, may have shown up late for work and made an excuse for his absence, may have left the area for a period of time
- there was probably some stressor in his life before he committed the crime (loss of a relationship, loss of a job, some kind of conflict w/ one or more of the victims that made him feel emasculated)
- we cannot think of this guy as a monster because people will be looking for a monster and he’s not a monster; he’s a human being who did a very bad thing (IOW he could be your nextdoor neighbor or the guy on the street smiling in your face)
- the person we’re looking for had a stressor before the murders, had a change in behavior before the murders, and had a change in behavior after the murders

Seems like most of us on this board would have come to those same conclusions. The possibility of life stressors was something I'd not thought of, and that could very well help bring in tips. The others? All obvious.

I disagree with the killer not being a monster, but I understand what Mr. Clemente is getting at - don't discard a potential suspect purely because they don't seem outwardly evil.

ETA: By obvious, I do not mean all of those traits are definitively true, only that they are likely. Same as the profiler.
 
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  • #606
If one person kills four people with a knife, it's rage.

True, but it could be an internalized, pathological rage unrelated to the actual victims. That's what I feel is most likely here, particularly as the days and weeks go on without an arrest.

Speaking of which, no way I would let my child go back to school there until someone was in custody. The lack of public information for students and the community is disturbing. It reminds me of a PR consulting firm playing the 'long game' in the hopes that the story of their client goes away. Indeed, if they just hold out long enough, another squirrel will appear!

My opinion.
 
  • #607
Posting for those catching up.

Idaho murders: Former first floor tenant of Moscow home says he couldn't hear activity from other floors

A former tenant of the Moscow, Idaho, home where four University of Idaho students were murdered on Nov. 13 says it was difficult to hear activity on the second and third floors of the home from the first, where he lived.

Ryan Augusta — a healthcare worker and local business owner who now lives in Genesee, Idaho — told Fox News Digital in an interview that when he lived on the first floor of the home on King Road in 2019, unless his roommate was playing the television loudly on the second floor, he typically "heard nothing" from the second and third floors.

"I wouldn't have heard it from downstairs," Augusta, 43, said when asked whether he could hear activity coming from the second and third floors of the house when he lived on the first floor.
 
  • #608
If one person kills four people with a knife, it's rage.
If more than one person participates, it's payback.
Why do you bring this up? I've not heard of any evidence for more than one killer and would be shocked if that were the case.
 
  • #609
I’m not a mod but I believe victims finances are off limits.

But I made six figures as a server/bartender when I was in college. ‍
You must have intended to quote a different post. My post did not have to do with victim finances.
 
  • #610
I don't think Jack, Kaylee's ex-boyfriend, was at the memorial. Haven't seen or heard about him.
Yes, they were there. JS spoke. JD went up with K’s family. JD did not speak.
 
  • #611
Why do you bring this up? I've not heard of any evidence for more than one killer and would be shocked if that were the case.
Perhaps because
There are more things in heaven and Earth, Horatio, / Than are dreamt of in your philosophy,
to quote the playwright.
 
  • #612
Seems like most of us on this board would have come to those same conclusions. The possibility of life stressors was something I'd not thought of, and that could very well help bring in tips. The others? All obvious.

I disagree with the killer not being monster, but I understand what Mr. Clemente is getting at - don't discard a potential suspect purely because they don't seem outwardly evil.

Yes, obvious to some of us. But I've been reading WS theories all day, and it's clear not *all* of these things are on everyone's list.

I think you're missing the point about what he's saying about a monster. LE knows this too. People who look very threatening and crazy (monsters) are rarely responsible for crimes like this.

The perp of this crime (says this particular profiler - who is speculating like the rest of us) is a person who looks fairly normal. So, as a univ prof, I myself should not be looking at the Crazy-Pants students who write Monstrous and act Monstrous, but at more normal looking people.

And I agree. Because by now, the Monstrous ones have likely been looked at. You are right that this perp doesn't look outwardly evil (and is probably watching carefully, for a long time, to make sure he doesn't look evil).

Even if he's crime-adjacent, he's cultivated a "normal" - even "good" persona. Like the man who killed Arliss Perry.
 
  • #613
Perhaps because
There are more things in heaven and Earth, Horatio, / Than are dreamt of in your philosophy,
to quote the playwright.
Perhaps indeed, which is why I was hoping you'd enlighten me.
 
  • #614
Have classes resumed at the university? If so, I’m sure LE is checking attendance-enrollment records to see if any students have suddenly dropped out, disenrolled or simply been skipping classes.
 
  • #615
Yes, obvious to some of us. But I've been reading WS theories all day, and it's clear not *all* of these things are on everyone's list.

I think you're missing the point about what he's saying about a monster. LE knows this too. People who look very threatening and crazy (monsters) are rarely responsible for crimes like this.

The perp of this crime (says this particular profiler - who is speculating like the rest of us) is a person who looks fairly normal. So, as a univ prof, I myself should not be looking at the Crazy-Pants students who write Monstrous and act Monstrous, but at more normal looking people.

And I agree. Because by now, the Monstrous ones have likely been looked at. You are right that this perp doesn't look outwardly evil (and is probably watching carefully, for a long time, to make sure he doesn't look evil).

Even if he's crime-adjacent, he's cultivated a "normal" - even "good" persona. Like the man who killed Arliss Perry.
Yes, I agree that the perp looks fairly normal, but maybe not for the same reasons... There are vanishingly few "monsters*" in living in society. In fact I'm not sure what behavior would qualify as a monster*, so maybe it's my lack of imagination.

* In this context I mean a person who could be said to act monstrously while otherwise living their free lives, generally not committing crimes.
 
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  • #616
IMO - I get strong Jayme Closs vibes from this case. I truly feel like it’s an unknown assailant who staked out a crime of opportunity and likely knew just enough to move swiftly.

Again, just my opinion.
I agree and also get a Molly Tibbetts, Sherry in Montana, and Eliza F feeling. MOOoOoO
 
  • #617
True, but it could be an internalized, pathological rage unrelated to the actual victims. That's what I feel is most likely here, particularly as the days and weeks go on without an arrest.

Speaking of which, no way I would let my child go back to school there until someone was in custody. The lack of public information for students and the community is disturbing. It reminds me of a PR consulting firm playing the 'long game' in the hopes that the story of their client goes away. Indeed, if they just hold out long enough, another squirrel will appear!

My opinion.
Unfortunately, this could be true.

I'd go with "direct expression of rage" first, rather than "projected rage accumulated life experiences" in this one, but it could be either.

I think I'd be keeping my kids home, as well. Because the odds of it being a weird local psycho who could act again is just slightly higher than I'd like it to be.
 
  • #618
  • #619
Xana’s mom is on the phone with Ashley Banfield on News Nation right now. Another one hour special on the case. Kaylee’s family is also talking again. Said they feel some people were cleared too quickly. Can’t link because there’s no live feed I have to link.
 
  • #620
I agree and also get a Molly Tibbetts, Sherry in Montana, and Eliza F feeling. MOOoOoO
I've got more of a BTK feeling. His first attack was a mass murder too.
 
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