Idaho murders: New theory about Bryan Kohberger’s mystery storage unit | Idaho students update



Idaho murders: New theory about Bryan Kohberger | Idaho students update. Newly released court documents in the Idaho murder case revealed that during a search of Bryan Kohberger’s apartment, investigators discovered traces of blood in his bedroom and uncovered a previously unknown storage unit belonging to the murder suspect. According to the new documents, when police approached the storage closet belonging to Kohberger – nearly two months after the quarduple homicide of Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Ethan Chapin and Xana Kernodle –  it was unlocked, the door was ‘ajar’. Cops reported that it was dusty with ‘cobwebs’. No trace evidence was taken and police didn’t believe Kohberger had used it ‘recently,’ but the unit’s existence may still provide a big lead for law enforcement. It’s plausible that Kohberger may have accessed the unit weeks earlier, closer to the time when the murders took place.

#idaho #idahomurders #truecrime #bryankohberger #theory #uscrime

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41 thoughts on “Idaho murders: New theory about Bryan Kohberger’s mystery storage unit | Idaho students update”

  1. If BK did it, he's smart enough not to contaminate his car, apartment, or his storage unit with incriminating evidence. How a perp or perps got away without leaving a blood trail (assuming there was no blood trail) is quite a mystery. It would seem necessary to change clothes before exiting the house. I'm not convinced that BK's Elantra was used in the crimes, but if it was, the perp was careful not to track any evidence into it, unless we eventually hear bombshell news that DNA was indeed found inside the car. I'm leaning in favor of the reported gossip going around both campuses suggesting there were multiple perps and now at least several students know who all was involved and why it happened and how the perps got away. We hear (from a supposed mom 'Kim' mostly) that this info, whether all or part is true, who knows, has been circulating in gossip among students. The prosecution seems to be going in the direction of 'lone wolf incel,' but the gossip seems to indicate a grudge of some kind creating intensifying emotions between two warring factions culminating in the incident, which offers a more logical narrative than simply 'lone wolf incel.' It all depends on what evidence the prosecution has or doesn't have.

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  2. The worldwide profile of the murders made the stakeholders must solve the crime whilst they were unable to find the killer. Understandably, the Uni & City were all at stake. But the FACT is that nearly half of U.S. murders go unsolved.
    When ppl worried that the case might go cold LE suddenly – nearly 7 weeks after the slayings & 2 days before NY – found BK, who mostly resembled the killer to them.

    But they forgot to have a convincing Motive & a Connection btw a killer & the victims. All crimes have a Motive & a Connection, except very few committed by real insane ppl or committed randomly. Though motive is not necessary for a conviction, practically jury still wants to know why BK slayed these victims?

    Then, the narratives of stalker, incel, misogynist, “frozen shock phase”, professional ethics and etc. flew out one by one. The silliest narratives were that BK tried to hide his fingerprints & DNA. The Common Sense is that once FBI is after you there is NO WAY that you can hide your fingerprints & DNA.

    On the other hand, IF BK is the Killer, there would be no need for any narratives – his phone, car, computer and apartment would be full of REAL evidence.
    It's almost certain that they got the wrong guy.

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  3. How can you have alleged movement? Movement is movement. The authorities just done know what they were. They are not alleging any movement. You use language for a living. Use it correctly please.

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  4. My theory, since the start, has been that he took that rural route back to Pullman for two reasons. 1) I think he may have thought 911 was called and that’s why the Elantra was seen leaving at a high rate of speed. Since Pullman is so close to Moscow I’d assume that there’d be first responders coming from Pullman. A 911 call would be like kicking a bees nest, there’d be first responders coming from everywhere and he’s not going to want to meet all of them on his way back to his apartment. 2) I think he did throw his clothes and stuff somewhere out there along his rural route home. He was probably terrified of being pulled over. That’d also explain why his phone was off the grid out there for hours the following day. He went back to find the discarded evidence and he hid it better.

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  5. I never put a shower curtain up in my bathrooms – they were problematic, and, I discovered that I didn't need them. So…. why create a problem by using them? A lot of people don't use shower curtains. Not unusual.

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  6. Oh no another Media trying grab/ push the Ko 🍔 theory with no factual evidence… must be a slow day in the office collecting click bait .
    We will all know soon enough !

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  7. She don t know what she tacking about first killer in running don t dispose a clothes he burned and no track from inside to outside the blood so the killer change it inside the house so the time the murder is wrong

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  8. In the video you reported Kohberger's apartment was a two-bedroom where the second bedroom was locked by a different key, which Kohberger didn't have access to. Do we know which if there was a separate bathroom inside that second bedroom, and if that was the one without shower curtain? Same question for the bedroom door cops found locked – was it Bryan's or the unused one?

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  9. Everything that she is saying points to guilt is pointing to innocence to me. Although I don't know the case fully. I don't think it's unusual to not use your storage unit. I don't think it's unusual to have trace amounts of blood on bedding (say if you picked a spot or got your period). If he leased the apartment from the uni the mattress might not be his.

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