Bryan Kohberger, the suspect in the University of Idaho murders, may have kept a driver’s license from one of the four people killed in the horrifying stabbings in November, sources revealed this week. Six weeks after Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin were killed in their off-campus Moscow house, Kohberger was arrested in Pennsylvania, on December 30.
A search warrant that was not sealed said authorities discovered certain IDs in the doctoral student’s car’s glove box in addition to DNA evidence linking Kohberger to the horrific scene, reports said. However, the story also states that authorities think they have proof linking Kohberger to cyberstalking one of the four victims from the Moscow murder residence. Police would not formally confirm the specifics of the license.
The potential finding was disclosed to the network’s Chris Cuomo by retired FBI agent Jennifer Coffindaffer. Trial lawyer Mark Geragos and Coffindaffer came on the network together, and Geragos speculated that Kohberger would do poorly if the ID discovery turned out to be accurate.
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Soon after it was reported that police were looking into whether the Pennsylvania native spoke to one of the victims before the murders, the rumor that Kohberger may have kept someone’s identity from the Moscow house surfaced. Kohberger was a criminal justice Ph.D. student at Washington State University in Pullman at the time of the killings; Pullman is only 15 miles from Moscow.
A revolver, several knives, and a black face mask were among the unsettling items that authorities took from Kohberger’s parent’s house after his dramatic arrest, according to search warrants that were unsealed last month. Even when scoping out the house before and after the murders, Kohberger neglected to switch off his cell phone. His phone was in the vicinity of the murders at least 12 times prior to the morning of the deaths, according to cell phone pings.
A surviving flatmate asserted that she was near the murderer the night of the crime. It was reported last week that police had served many search warrants on social media platforms to determine if Kohberger had ever spoken with his victims.
Given the circumstances, Kohberger appears to be in the wrong, reports said. Kohberger is being held in Latah County, Idaho, and has not yet admitted guilt to four counts of murder and one count of felony burglary. He is expected to be back in court on June 26.
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