“Evidence corroborating Mr. Kohberger being at a location other than the King Road address will be disclosed pursuant to discovery and evidentiary rules as well as statutory requirements,” Bryan Kohberger’s legal team wrote in newly filed court documents.
“We believe leaving the house standing, for now, is the right course to take,” University of Idaho President Scott Green said, after some victims' family members opposed tearing it down before Bryan Kohberger’s murder trial.
“The home itself has enormous evidentiary value as well as being the largest, and one of the most important, pieces of evidence in the case,” said Shannon Gray, a lawyer representing the family of Kaylee Goncalves.
Bryan Kohberger was first arrested in 2014 after he allegedly stole his sister's $400 iPhone and told his father "not to do anything stupid" when the alleged theft was discovered.
The DNA found on the knife sheath was at least 5.37 octillion times more likely to be Kohberger's than a random member of the public, prosecutors said in a new court filing.
A judge entered not guilty pleas Monday for Bryan Kohberger, the man charged in the stabbing deaths of four University of Idaho students, setting the stage for a trial in which he could potentially face the death penalty.
The family of University of Idaho murder victim Kaylee Goncalves vows to be in court during the upcoming case against her accused killer Bryan Kohberger, who was indicted by a grand jury this week.
Pointing to mugshots and clues about the crimes themselves, observers have been drawing parallels between killings that occurred more than 40 years apart.