
Bryan Kohberger may have been captured driving near the crime scene before it all went down. Source: @Today/YouTube;mega
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Global Pulse - Trending & Viral News
Bryan Kohberger may have been captured driving near the crime scene before it all went down. Source: @Today/YouTube;mega
.
.
Global Pulse - Trending & Viral News
A new video has surfaced showing a white sedan linked to Idaho murders suspect Bryan Kohberger.
Captured by a neighbor’s home security, the footage shows Kohberger driving near the crime scene—just one day before four students were tragically killed.
The clip, first shared by Dateline, shows the car circling the house on King Road several times before speeding off after 13 minutes.
The next night, November 13, 2022, four students—Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin—were found dead in a brutal knife attack at an off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho.
Investigators quickly zeroed in on a white Hyundai Elantra, likely a 2011-2013 model, and asked the public for help. Their efforts paid off when Bryan Kohberger was arrested on December 30, 2022. He faces four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary.
Crucial evidence is now coming to light.
Prosecutors say the car, along with DNA and cellphone data, should be enough to convict 30-year-old Bryan Kohberger.
An FBI cellphone expert told NBC that Kohberger’s phone connected to a cell tower near the crime scene 23 times over four months—always after dark.
Investigators also found his phone had internet searches about serial killer Ted Bundy, as well as disturbing porn searches with terms like “drugged” and “sleeping,” before and after the murders.
Despite this, Kohberger’s lawyers pleaded not guilty in May 2023.
Bryan Kohberger, once a criminology grad student at Washington State University, could face death row if convicted—even as his defense fights against it.
His lawyers argued that his autism diagnosis makes him more vulnerable and that the media has unfairly painted him as “evil.”
But Judge Steven Hippler disagreed. He ruled that while Kohberger’s diagnosis can be considered during sentencing, it doesn’t rule out the death penalty.
Kohberger’s defense also said detectives in Moscow hid a glove with blood from an unknown man found outside the house.
Paul Huebl, a former Chicago cop turned private eye, said this could help the defense claim their client was framed.
He added, “The unknown blood creates reasonable doubt, making it tough to convict in a death penalty case.”
FBI technicians matched DNA on a knife sheath found at the scene to Kohberger using genetic samples.
But Paul Huebl pointed out, “Besides that sheath DNA, there’s no evidence placing Kohberger at the scene.”
He added, “Police searched his dorm, but found no trace of the victims’ blood.”
Kohberger’s trial is scheduled to start in August 2025.
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