That's what I remember but I don't have the docs handy to search so 2nd hand info will have to do. I don't remember one of the IDs being from someone connected to 1122 King Rd. Unsure if that's in the unsealed docs or if Newsweek took liberties.
- Unsealed court documents say police seized ID cards that were inside a glove in a box during a search of Kohberger's parents' home.
- One ID that was found is reportedly connected to someone in the home where the slayings occurred.
Kohberger, 28, is charged with breaking into a home in Moscow and fatally stabbing four University of Idaho students.
www.newsweek.com
On the Pennsylvania webpage,
Commonwealth v. Kohberger 682 MD 2022, none of the links for the search warrant returns for the murderer’s family home, car, and person are correct (the home link is for the person, the person link is for the car, and the car link is for the home):
One of the questions Fixler answered during today’s
Idaho Statesman’s livestream event,
“Covering the University of Idaho Murders,” (starting at 42:29) asked if we would find out more details about the items found in the LE search of the murderer’s family home in PA.
Fixler specifically addressed the book with underlining on page 118, the Glock, and the ID cards that were found in a glove in a box:
Fixler said the Glock had nothing to do with the crime scene, but I’d like to know if the gun was registered to the murderer and if he brought it with him to Washington (and Idaho). If the murderer had been captured immediately after his rampage, “suicide by cop” might have been one of his ultimate escape plans (plus he liked to frequent wild places at night, when he might encounter large predators like bears or mountain lions, or other crazy men).
Fixler said he asked Bill Thompson about the book with underlining on page 118, which many people have asked about. Thompson didn’t know which book was underlined, but he said LE found a lot of academic books on forensic psychology, criminal justice, and criminology. Fixler promised to follow up with investigators to find out the identity of the underlined book, which I, for one, am eager to know.
Finally, Fixler said that
none of the ID cards that were found in a glove in a box belonged to any of the victims. Instead, one of the cards belonged to a female security guard the murderer worked with at Pleasant Valley School District back in PA, and the other belonged to another woman whose identity was not revealed. Both women were surprised that the murderer had their ID cards.