GUILTY PLEA DEAL ACCEPTED - 4 Univ of Idaho Students Murdered, Bryan Kohberger Arrested, Moscow, Nov 2022 #112

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  • #201
More that was new to me in Part One: The Innocents in The Idaho Four:

Dylan was Emily Alandt’s sorority “Little,” which is why Dylan called Emily whenever she was frightened—whether due to something as innocuous as a pan falling in the nearby kitchen or as sinister as a masked murderer dressed in black from head to toe.
 
  • #202
More that was new to me in Part One: The Innocents in The Idaho Four:

Dylan was Emily Alandt’s sorority “Little,” which is why Dylan called Emily whenever she was frightened—whether due to something as innocuous as a pan falling in the nearby kitchen or as sinister as a masked murderer dressed in black from head to toe.
This was also mentioned in the Prime documentary.
 
  • #203

Some of you might want to watch this:

Prime Video’s upcoming four-part docuseries ‘One Night in Idaho: The College Murders’.

Chapin’s triplet siblings Maizie and Hunter Chapin broke their silence about their final hours with their brother and the devastating moment they learned of his murder in Prime Video’s upcoming four-part docuseries ‘One Night in Idaho: The College Murders’.
 
  • #204
Wouldn’t it be something if none of the families attend the sentencing? BK has already stolen so much from these families. He needs to go away forever.
Agree...in a sense , it's could be the biggest impact they can have, zero.
No one gets a piece of you and loved ones after your person was so brutally and horrifically and senselessly robbed of their life.
Killer gets nothing, And the court day doesn't get to take a day in their life they can't get back to agonizingly address the court while the admitted murderous devil watches and quite possibly, derives joy or draws satisfaction. The "impact" is obvious.
Chapin's made their statement -nope. family on boat with our memories. Not going to feed the monster.
 
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  • #205
Long been debated, but the book answers the question on where the dog was the night of the murders: in Kaylee's room.
 
  • #206
Per the book: Dylan initially thought BK was a firefighter. Thought he was holding a "firefighting object", kinda like a vacuum.

They made eye contact.
 
  • #207
Agree...in a sense , it's could be the biggest impact they can have, zero.
No one gets a piece of you and loved ones after your person was so brutally and horrifically and senselessly robbed of their life.
killer get nothing, And the court day doesn't get to take a day in their life they can't get back to agonizingly address the court while the admitted murderous devil watches and quite possibly, derives joy or draws satisfaction . The "impact" is obvious .
Chapin's made their statement -nope. family on boat with our memories. Not going to feed the monster

Don't forget, Killer BK is also allowed to talk to the victims at his sentencing.

Good take, no one show. If a family member does talk at sentencing they could be like this if they want.....


Mother of Pike County Victim Rips Wagner Family in Fiery Court Statement
... Calls killer "spawn of satan" amongst other things

1752537062549.webp
 
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  • #208
Don't forget, Killer BK is also allowed to talk to the victims at his sentencing.

Good take, no one show. If a family member does talk at sentencing they could be like this if they want.....


Mother of Pike County Victim Rips Wagner Family in Fiery Court Statement
... Calls killer "spawn of satan" amongst other things

View attachment 601707
Mic drop. Oh boy
 
  • #209
New: (nothing particularly of interest)


The only livestream will still be the one provided by the court, no outside media--just like the last hearing (and just like that last one, other places can use it).

Since AP did the official in courtroom allowed photography last time, they are being allowed that opportunity again.

Also, a clarification to what the official photographer will be not allowed to do (in the court room):

"Photographs may not be taken or published of any victims or members of any family members of the victims. Photographs of the gallery, and attorney work product including any screens or papers at counsel table may not be taken" (the second sentence is new, compared to the order for the previous hearing)


Basically the state saying they are providing a piece of discovery to the defense as they are obligated to do by Idaho law (until the sentencing?). Then there is a filing requesting the discovery they are providing be sealed (due to the nature of the information being made public would violate the personal privacy of the individual it is related to) and an order by the judge granting that order.
 
  • #210
I'm guessing he did it before he decided to plea, thinking he was taking it to trial...
Agree, he wanted to look that way for jury selection, I am thinking.
 
  • #211
  • #212
Agree, he wanted to look that way for jury selection, I am thinking.
I base this off my own haircuts (never shaved my eyebrows, though), but I thought the same thing. I can plot out a haircut in advance knowing I'll have a certain amount of time before it looks "just right". I think he was all set to go to trial and prepped his hair and brows until he changed his mind at the last possible moment.
 
  • #213
It’s not like someone intending to commit murder would be averse to picking a lock or quietly breaking a window to enter even if the house had been locked.
Yeah it’s one extra layer of security and we’ll probably never know if that factored in his decision to target 1122 King Rd, but if he was determined to enter that house, I don’t think breaking and entering would have been beyond the scope of crimes he was willing to commit.
you raise a good point though; since he is not nearly the master criminal he thought he was, would he have been able to pick a lock? a guy who can't keep from getting pulled over for tailgating? a guy who left his knife sheath behind? not to mention his cell phone pinging all around that house. most security experts i've read have said expert (experienced) criminals will get in if they want to and have enough time. locks, etc are there to make it more annoying and therefore deter most people.
 
  • #214
30% into the book and my one gripe is the petty obsession on BK's "bulging eyes". There are plenty of anecdotal reasons to dislike BK. Mocking him for his appearance just seems unnecessarily gross.
 
  • #215
you raise a good point though; since he is not nearly the master criminal he thought he was, would he have been able to pick a lock? a guy who can't keep from getting pulled over for tailgating? a guy who left his knife sheath behind? not to mention his cell phone pinging all around that house. most security experts i've read have said expert (experienced) criminals will get in if they want to and have enough time. locks, etc are there to make it more annoying and therefore deter most people.
If a locked door had an actual keylock, or deadbolt lock, it may deter many would-be intruders, but most sliding glass doors of that age do not actually lock, they latch, and they are notoriously easy to break into. I will not post any here, but you can find countless videos on YouTube that show people breaking into them within a matter of a few seconds. I have actually done it, myself, when I once lived in a house that had a sliding glass patio door. In most cases, it is just a matter of lifting the door out of the track, and simultaneously using the handle to pull it away from the latch. There are ways to make them more secure, but there is no indication that the 1122 King Rd residents had done so, and there were even unconfirmed suggestions that the door was broken and could not be locked.

FWIW, I believe BK probably knew that door would be unlocked when he approached it on that morning. I think the chances are very good that BK had actually stood at that door, and probably opened it at least once, before the morning of the murders., and I also believe it is very likely that he had been inside the home before. JMO
 
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  • #216
I base this off my own haircuts (never shaved my eyebrows, though), but I thought the same thing. I can plot out a haircut in advance knowing I'll have a certain amount of time before it looks "just right". I think he was all set to go to trial and prepped his hair and brows until he changed his mind at the last possible moment.
Do you mean as in BK got a proper haircut for the trial and then shaved his eyebrows by himself?

I ask because I've been wondering how (and why) that went down. Did he ask the hairdresser to buzz them off? Did BK ask a guard for a razor blade to shave his entire face? JMO surprised they let BK alone with a razor so close to the trial.

Otherwise going into the courtroom with shaved eyebrows is such a creepy, twisted choice IMHO.
 
  • #217

"Couch formerly lived at the large, off-campus house where four University of Idaho students were brutally murdered at 1122 King Road in the small community of Moscow, Idaho.

Couch had recently graduated and moved back home to her parents’ house to save money, her mom said.

She had planned to head to Moscow to hang out with her former roommates on Nov. 12, but when her parents were delayed returning home from a trip, they asked Couch to stay in Coeur D’Alene one extra day to watch their dogs. "
Would her room be the one on the first floor? Or, was she taking over KG's room since KG had moved out?
 
  • #218
Do you mean as in BK got a proper haircut for the trial and then shaved his eyebrows by himself?

I ask because I've been wondering how (and why) that went down. Did he ask the hairdresser to buzz them off? Did BK ask a guard for a razor blade to shave his entire face? JMO surprised they let BK alone with a razor so close to the trial.

Otherwise going into the courtroom with shaved eyebrows is such a creepy, twisted choice IMHO.
I want to know how he lightened his hair. His hair for the court hearing was much lighter than the dark brown it has been for all the previous hearings.
 
  • #219
I want to know how he lightened his hair. His hair for the court hearing was much lighter than the dark brown it has been for all the previous hearings.
why
 
  • #220
Somehow he found their social media posts, and he had a thing for blondes. He didn't want to hunt at WSU, it'd be linked to him. They probably rejected him as did other women because he was so creepy.
This.

People talk about locking doors and closing curtains in their homes but not as many realise that social media can be and is an actual peephole into you, your life, home and routine!
I find it very scary how much people (especially young people) share on their WIDE OPEN socials. Like I am just a woman in my 30's but the amount of follow requests I get on my Instagram account weekly is insane and I often think, how on earth do these people find me?! Of course I'm locked down and tbh I only share pictures of trees and graveyards that I visit on my insta, but it's honestly terrifying if you really think about it.
I believe creepface was obsessively checking at least one of the housemates insta and trolling using the wide open profile that showed him pretty much everything he needed to know.

Lock down your socials the same way you would lock your front door people 🖤
 
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