GUILTY PLEA DEAL ACCEPTED - 4 Univ of Idaho Students Murdered, Bryan Kohberger Arrested, Moscow, Nov 2022 #115

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  • #141
Re leaked video from cell.

Now,
when I think about it,
I remember deAngelo (Golden State killer) was also secretly filmed in his cell.
The video showed him jumping on furniture with agility,
while in Court he was sitting in a wheelchair with a confused face.

Maybe leaking such prison CCTV is some kind of tradition? 🤔
I think in the GSK case, it was shown during sentencing to make a point that the weak old man he pretended to be in his appearances were an act. They weren't leaked by an unknown employee; they were part of the official record.

BK's leaked video very much seems more like an intrusion of privacy and violation of protocol. The leaker here should certainly be reprimanded.
 
  • #142
I'm wondering if he was breaking into homes "practicing" that part of his plan for a long time. Maybe stealing ID's. He could have gotten a rush from that knowing the person would be really inconvenienced and perhaps freaked out wondering how it went missing. IMO
I totally think he was breaking into houses long before the murders. I suspect he was in the King Road house before the night of the murders (just a guess).

I don't know how he found the time to do everyhing, tbh. He was on the phone with Mother for hours, he monopolized people in his program at school, he was a TA and had his own studies to do. He followed people around, apparently researched them (he knew the cafe worker's name and schedule), lurked around their homes, entered their homes (the co-worker whose items he re-arranged).

He was only there for about half a year!

Was he not sleeping at night and taking something to help him stay away in the day?

jmopinion
 
  • #143
Don't know if anybody else has noticed that there's quite a few instance of BK lying to people at WSU - small pointless lies most of the time.

He tells an undergrad that he has a background in the military.
He tells one of the Profs he lives nearby to where the Prof parks their car. He doesn't doesn't live there
He tells several Grad students that he has no social media ( MPD found a long list of SM accounts, even though they'd been wiped)
He tells multiple people that he doesn't drink alcohol, a couple of different people see him drinking on different occasions ( as previously discussed here)
When asked about the bruising on his left hand ( the TA described it as if he'd been punching drywall in anger) he replies that he's a boxer.

Because he lies IDK if this next one is true
He tells another student that he only eats one meal a day.

Pathological lying is characteristic for people with MH issues.

In some cases, compulsive lying can be linked to OCD's patterns of obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors.

Although,
the last one - about 1 meal a day seems to be true IMO.
He has strange eating habits + his obsession of staying thin.

JMO

 
  • #144
the last one - about 1 meal a day seems to be true IMO.
He has strange eating habits + his obsession of staying thin.
Snipped

You'd think he'd be perpetually "hangry" by going hours and hours without food. Maybe he was. It's harder to think straight and have perspetive when there is no fuel in the body, in my observation.

No offense to anyone who eats once a day. I'm referring to BK and am assuming other people who eat infrequently are not off-kilter murderers.

I'm leaning more and more toward him being on some substance that quenches hunger and also keeps him up awake for long hours. Just a guess.

jmopinion
 
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  • #145
Pathological lying is characteristic for people with MH issues.

In some cases, compulsive lying can be linked to OCD's patterns of obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors.

Although,
the last one - about 1 meal a day seems to be true IMO.
He has strange eating habits + his obsession of staying thin.


JMO


BTW re any obsession to stay slim, one of the pool party guests says she could tell he used to be overweight. He was wearing a top and board shorts so the skin issue must have still been noticeable despite the tummy tuck he'd had years before.


ETA
Anyway just remembered another nugget. Recall the student who felt he'd been through her bathroom medicine cabinet, after she hosted a party for the TAs? What he did after was to go tell others that ' X takes medicine Y for condition Z'
All heavily redacted but how mean is that ?
 
  • #146
I think in the GSK case, it was shown during sentencing to make a point that the weak old man he pretended to be in his appearances were an act. They weren't leaked by an unknown employee; they were part of the official record.

BK's leaked video very much seems more like an intrusion of privacy and violation of protocol. The leaker here should certainly be reprimanded.

Yep!
GSK
He was a real piece of work! :rolleyes:

But, at least,
he apologized during sentencing.
With weak (poor me), shivering voice
"I'm sorry".
 
  • #147
Yep!
GSK
He was a real piece of work! :rolleyes:

But, at least,
he apologized during sentencing.
With weak (poor me), shivering voice
"I'm sorry".
The GSK had more humanity than BK, the courtesy to apologize?
It is so good BK didn't get a chance to learn from 1122.
 
  • #148
ETA
Anyway just remembered another nugget. Recall the student who felt he'd been through her bathroom medicine cabinet, after she hosted a party for the TAs? What he did after was to go tell others that ' X takes medicine Y for condition Z'
All heavily redacted but how mean is that ?

I'm not sure it is exactly mean.
I see it as part of his MH condition.
He seems to have NO boundaries.
No clue about normal social interactions.
He is sick IMO.

I asked once, but got no answer.
Was he ever attending psychological therapy?
Was he under the care of psychiatrist?

I guess not.
What a pity! (if not)

JMO
 
  • #149
I'm not sure it is exactly mean.
I see it as part of his MH condition.
He seems to have NO boundaries.
No clue about normal social interactions.
He is sick IMO.

I asked once, but got no answer.
Was he ever attending psychological therapy?
Was he under the care of psychiatrist?

I guess not.
What a pity! (if not)

JMO
The whole of the WSU document load is littered with incidences of targeted cruel remarks. (Not against everybody, selected people)

Personality disorder I guess ( The only MH condition we know about is the OCD)
 
  • #150
I totally think he was breaking into houses long before the murders. I suspect he was in the King Road house before the night of the murders (just a guess).

I don't know how he found the time to do everyhing, tbh. He was on the phone with Mother for hours, he monopolized people in his program at school, he was a TA and had his own studies to do. He followed people around, apparently researched them (he knew the cafe worker's name and schedule), lurked around their homes, entered their homes (the co-worker whose items he re-arranged).

He was only there for about half a year!

Was he not sleeping at night and taking something to help him stay away in the day?

jmopinion

He was taking classes and working as a TA

9 hours a semester- 3 classes per week
4-6 hours a day- TA part-time
Probably grading, sitting in lectures taking notes.

The rest of his program would have been reading/ library research (as opposed to lab research), writing papers. He may have been asked to do a literature review for a prof, or annotate articles, prepare a presentation, transcribe interviews, grade papers.

An immature student doesn’t manage all that free time well. If he was accustomed to commuting and working longer hours and taking 12-15 hours per semester he probably felt like he had a lot of free time to waste.

He was spending his nights driving around- but he may not have had to be on campus at work or class until 10AM or so.

IMO
 
  • #151
Pathological lying is characteristic for people with MH issues.

In some cases, compulsive lying can be linked to OCD's patterns of obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors.

Although,
the last one - about 1 meal a day seems to be true IMO.
He has strange eating habits + his obsession of staying thin.

JMO


Yeah maybe telling lies is mental illness, but not always

My sister is married to a pathological liar. He will tell you a lie about anything.
Everyday life just isn’t exciting enough for him- something is always taking place in his life that is more exciting than everyone else’s life.
I have zero poker face, so he pretty much stays away from me. My face clearly must be saying- You lying bast-rd, every time he is around.
I’ve told him if there is a bird in the sky it is going to find you and crap on your head.
It is too true- he simply makes stuff up- no rhyme or reason just to have something interesting to say. For a middle aged man he is quite the drama queen.

So telling lies isn’t always a mental illness, sometimes just a liar

IMO
 
  • #152
Re leaked video from cell.

Now,
when I think about it,
I remember deAngelo (Golden State killer) was also secretly filmed in his cell.
The video showed him jumping on furniture with agility,
while in Court he was sitting in a wheelchair with a confused face.

Maybe leaking such prison CCTV is some kind of tradition? 🤔
I just saw one on this last night! Woman in Arkansas- appeared in court in a wheelchair- yet they had video footage of her dancing and running to the chow line in jail! Totally discredited her "Poor me" fragility defense.
 
  • #153
BTW re any obsession to stay slim, one of the pool party guests says she could tell he used to be overweight. He was wearing a top and board shorts so the skin issue must have still been noticeable despite the tummy tuck he'd had years before.


ETA
Anyway just remembered another nugget. Recall the student who felt he'd been through her bathroom medicine cabinet, after she hosted a party for the TAs? What he did after was to go tell others that ' X takes medicine Y for condition Z'
All heavily redacted but how mean is that ?
Just mentioning that it may not have had anything to do with weight or skin issues. Some people are very afraid of sun damage, or have t shirt tan or are fish belly white (the latter would be me) so cover up where others do not.
 
  • #154
I would like to note here that OCD can come in all forms, including setting a specific eating pattern, not being able to sleep for all the OCD thoughts going through your head, having any thoughts that tell you that you must do x (often must do x to get y). Must turn knob three times before locking. Must not eat until 3 pm. Must not ever be wrong. This last one can manifest as if the person is wrong ABOUT something, it follows the person IS wrong AS a person and the thought must be avoided at all times. Had a friend with severe OCD. The obsessions were many and often made little sense.

From what I observed and my friend told me about his OCD, that alone can mess you up far greater others realize. My own experience with someone who had it.
 
  • #155

Bryan Kohberger’s prison responds to complaints about inmates ‘taunting’ him​


This article contains good photos of BK's prison. NewsNation got a rare look inside the Idaho supermax prison where Bryan Kohberger will spend the rest of his life.


NewsNation learned that Kohberger was being “tormented” by his fellow inmates, who are taking turns shouting through the air ducts at him. He is in “J Block” and that block is the worst outside of being on death row.

They are now making his life absolutely miserable. They’re utilizing the vent system, they’re kicking the doors, they’re taunting him and he’s complaining to the guards.

He’s in an isolation situation, those around him can’t get to him physically. Like a prison within a prison. The guards, the most they can do is write it down or tell him, "Hey, there’s nothing we can do. You’re not in physical harm."

As I mentioned before, he should be able to buy ear plugs and ear buds for his tablet to help mute all the shouting and banging. Sounds like the inmates are kicking their own doors just to cause noise disturbance.

I assume he relies on his parents to put $$$ in his commissary account.
 
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  • #156
He was taking classes and working as a TA

9 hours a semester- 3 classes per week
4-6 hours a day- TA part-time
Probably grading, sitting in lectures taking notes.

The rest of his program would have been reading/ library research (as opposed to lab research), writing papers. He may have been asked to do a literature review for a prof, or annotate articles, prepare a presentation, transcribe interviews, grade papers.

An immature student doesn’t manage all that free time well. If he was accustomed to commuting and working longer hours and taking 12-15 hours per semester he probably felt like he had a lot of free time to waste.

He was spending his nights driving around- but he may not have had to be on campus at work or class until 10AM or so.

IMO
Even then in the last documents it said that if a woman was the professor he'd show up halfway through the class or sometimes not show up at all.
 
  • #157
Academic study drives me nuts- the promotion of textbooks and such without tangible applicable results feels like useless mind exercises or commentary. If that is what it is- let’s just call it that.

When people want answers, info to keep young people safe, the last thing they need is academic theory and commentary.
Rigorous academic study asks questions that don't occur to us, or that we wouldn't ask because we believe the truths we derive from our life experiences are universal - or that they should be. And every study that reveals new information also leads to new questions about our complex world and the complex people in it. That's one reason we find it so annoying.

We want answers that are simple and foolproof, based on information that does not challenge our preconceptions. But the world is not simple and nothing is foolproof. Science often gives us answers that make us uncomfortable, that challenge our personal truth, so we make cynical and disparaging comments about it.

Especially in the wake of horrific acts of violence, we lead with negative emotion, which is natural. But emotion interferes with our reasoning capacity - it doesn't lead us to a better understanding of causes or improved knowledge of what we can - and cannot - expect from our institutions and experts.

I think the pragmatic points you have raised are excellent and children who practice such good habits will benefit.

At this point, academic study of deadly violence cannot provide answers and solutions - but it is very important that we support continued inquiry and publication. That's the only way our descendants will ever be safer.
 
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  • #158
I would like to note here that OCD can come in all forms, including setting a specific eating pattern, not being able to sleep for all the OCD thoughts going through your head, having any thoughts that tell you that you must do x (often must do x to get y). Must turn knob three times before locking. Must not eat until 3 pm. Must not ever be wrong. This last one can manifest as if the person is wrong ABOUT something, it follows the person IS wrong AS a person and the thought must be avoided at all times. Had a friend with severe OCD. The obsessions were many and often made little sense.

From what I observed and my friend told me about his OCD, that alone can mess you up far greater others realize. My own experience with someone who had it.
Useful info. Thank you. I also have someone in my life with OCD and am only just learning about it.

jmo
 
  • #159
I don't know how he found the time to do everyhing, tbh. He was on the phone with Mother for hours, he monopolized people in his program at school, he was a TA and had his own studies to do. He followed people around, apparently researched them (he knew the cafe worker's name and schedule), lurked around their homes, entered their homes (the co-worker whose items he re-arranged

It does seem like a lot to fit into a day, but as @AngTxGal reminded us, a college schedule involves many fewer hours than anything prior to higher education usually demands.

I imagine that quite a bit of the time he held his mother verbally hostage on the phone, he was on his cell and was multi-tasking while grading papers or anything else.

If anyone is as old as me, I grew up when the phone was a house phone, with the curly wire and rotary dial. When you were on the phone, you were only on the phone.

Obviously those days are long gone.

Just my speculation.
 
  • #160
I would like to note here that OCD can come in all forms, including setting a specific eating pattern, not being able to sleep for all the OCD thoughts going through your head, having any thoughts that tell you that you must do x (often must do x to get y). Must turn knob three times before locking. Must not eat until 3 pm. Must not ever be wrong. This last one can manifest as if the person is wrong ABOUT something, it follows the person IS wrong AS a person and the thought must be avoided at all times. Had a friend with severe OCD. The obsessions were many and often made little sense.

From what I observed and my friend told me about his OCD, that alone can mess you up far greater others realize. My own experience with someone who had it.

Yup. Been dealing with it at various levels for 19 years now with my eldest (started when he was 4). OCD can really disrupt sleep and sleep patterns. He even had to do a sleep study for it. Luckily my son never vacuumed in the middle of the night (as BK's apartment neighbors at WSU reported).


Severe visual snow can as well. And OCD and visual snow are a great chicken and egg combination.

Then there is another nasty thing that is common with bad visual snow--depersonalization/derealization (not full blown DID). And that can mess with sleep patterns as well.

Then you look at whatever migraine or psych medications he may have tried over his teen years. Ditto for potential for messing up sleep.

And even when/if one of those things improves noticeably.....if you went through a long period of sleep problems due to those issues, congratulations---you've now altered your circadian rhythms, likely developed very bad sleep hygiene. And now you've got figure out how retrain your body/brain to go back to something more normal for sleep.....and if your sleep has been messed up for a long time, it's going to be even harder to undo. Melatonin doesn't work for some people--me and the OCD kid get nightmares from even small amounts of it. My 18 yo (who has other issues) is fine on it.

Not to mention the rise in popularity in energy drinks during his teen years and young adulthood.

Likely a LOT of things went into giving him a long lasting sleep issue.
 
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