Brian Kohberger In 2022, the Idaho students of four universities developed a reputation to be sexist and scary while attending a criminal justice program before killing students, the students of fellow grades told investigators.
There were more than 550 pages of investigation documents Recently released In response to public record requests by Idaho State Police. He included an interview summary with students and coaches at Washington State University, where Kohberger was a doctoral student in criminal science.
Kohberger’s behavior was so problematic that the faculty member of the Washington State University told the co-workers that if he ever became a professor, he would sexually abuse or sexually abuse his future students, according to the documents. He urged his colleagues to remove Kohberger’s funding from the program to cut it.
According to the report of Idaho State Police Detective Ryan O’Hara, “It is quite smart that we have to give him PhD in four years.” He continued, “Mark my word, I work with hunters, if we give him a PhD, the boy who is in that many years when he is a professor, we will hear that he is harassing, staring, and sexually abusing … wherever he has students in the university.”
Was kohberger Life sentenced to jail without parole Last month, Kaylee Gonclaves, Madison Mozen, Zana Karnodal and Ethan Chapin at a rented house near Moscow, Idaho on 13 November 2022 to kill the stabbing of the stabbing of Ethan Chapin.
The WSU Faculty Member told investigators that Kohbergers would sometimes go to an office where many female graduate students worked, physically blocked the door. Sometimes, she hears one of the women saying, “I really need to leave from here,” so she will go to the office to allow the student to leave.
The faculty member believed that the Kohberger was staring at the people. He told the police that someone had allegedly stole perfume and underwear in a female graduate student apartment in September or October.
An unnamed Ph.D. The student was in the same program as Kohberger that the student told the police that he was enjoying the struggle, was disliked by women and he preferred to talk about sexual theft especially – his field of study.
About three weeks after the murders, Kohberger received Ph.D. Idaho State Police Detective SGT. Michael Van Lewaven wrote in a report. Kohberger also told the woman that the murders could be “another kind of thing,” Van Lewaven wrote.
Van Lewaven wrote, “The woman said that she had never met anyone who acted in such a kind of kind and wondered why people in power in the department did not address their behavior.” “The way he spoke to women in the department was unstable for them.”
An instructor told the police that he was assigned to work with Kohberger at his doctoral program. At the end of August 2022, she said that she started receiving complaints about her from students and employees in a criminal justice program.
The instructor told the police that he spent “a lot of time” while speaking about Kohberger during disciplinary meetings.
According to an explorer reported, “Some criminal justice focus on their behavior around the professors, as well as the meetings around Kohberger’s conversation with fellow post-graduate students, within and outside the class.”
Idaho State Police Detective Scene Prosar wrote in a report that the school received nine separate complaints from faculty members, administration employees and other students. In response, the school organized a compulsory training class for all graduate students about the expectations of behavior.
According to police reports, many fellow students and trainers of Kohberger did not doubt their participation in murders. But at least one fellow student noticed that his behavior changed after the murders.
The student said Kohberger often used his phone before the murders, but stopped bringing his cellphone into class after the murders. He appeared more disappointing even in the weeks after the murders, told the police, and felt it was strange that he never participated in a conversation about Moscow’s death.
He eventually called a police tip line to report that he had seen Kohberger with bloody tips just before the murders and his hand looked as if he was killing something.
Celmets said that Kohberger used soap 3 times a week and washed excessive hands
After his arrest, Celmets lodged with Kohberger in the office of Latah County Sheriff in Moscow said that he liked to watch news coverage about him.
According to a selmet, Kohberger said, “Wow, I am on every channel.” Another Celmet told the police that Kohberger enjoyed seeing the news about his case until he starts talking about his family or friends, the point at which he would immediately change the channel. But as time passed, that CellMet said, he almost stopped looking at the news related to his case.
Kohberger passed through three standard size bars of soap a week, both Celmets told the police, took hours of shower and washed excessive hands, which were red with hand washing.
He also wanted new beds and clothes every day, the other Celmet told the police.
Contributed to this report.