The suspect of murders of students from Idaho, Bryan Kherberger, returns to the Court today for a motion hearing, since his defense hopes to have a series of evidence in the blocked case of his judgment.
The 30 -year -old criminologist aspiring has the drums to enter a six -bedroom house and kill four students from the Idaho University in a 4 -Am spree on November 13, 2022.
At least two of the victims were asleep at the beginning of the attack, according to Shothorys.
He allegedly turned off his cell phone before heading to the house and changed his plates days after the murders, according to the authorities.
But they claim that they found a key evidence: their DNA in a Ka-bar knife pod left under the body of Madison May, 21.
The other three victims were Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and Ethan Chapin, 20.
Among the evidence, Kherberger wants to stay out of trial are his Amazon purchasing records, which allegedly shows that he bought a Ka bar knife and a pod months before the murders and bought a replacement later; Testimony of a surviving room partner who told the police that he saw an intruder with bush eyebrows just after the attack; Audio 911; Kherberger’s university essay on the management of a crime scene; A selfie photo that shows the suspect posing with a thumb up in front of a shower; and data from the National Meteorological Service that could place a cloud on its alibi.
Kherberger is also asking the court to break precedents and remove the death penalty, arguing that he must face it is convicted because he has autism.
Here is the last coverage of the brutal murders of four university friends:
On the other hand, prosecutors are asking the court to prevent Kherberger arguing that it was framed, and they want the defense to stop referring to the state’s intention to seek the death penalty as an attempt to kill him.
On November 13, 2022, Kherberger was studying for a PH.D. In Criminology at Washington State University in Pullman, Washington. It is about 10 miles from the crime scene in Moscow, Idaho, where the victims were university students from the Idaho University.
The police did not have solid potential clients for more than a month, until the techniques of genetic genetic genetics used in the DNA of the knife sheath cool them a advice: the name of Kherberger. On December 30, 2022, the State Police of Pennsylvania arrested him at his parents’ house in Albrightsville, a closed community in the mountains of Pocono.
They took a pinch of cheek on the scene, and he has a leg of legs without bail since then.
A judge presented supplications of non -guilt to the first degree murder positions and theft in its reading of charges in May 2023.
After a successful discussion for a change in the place, Kherberger will be judged in Boise with a scheduled start date for August 11.