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In the weeks following Bryan KohbergerArrested in December 2022 for the murders of four Idaho University studentsThe University of Washington University’s graduate pupils and teachers told the police about the anxious behavior who exhibited around the time of the murders.
Kohberger, 30, followed a PhD in Criminology in the Washington province and served as a teacher assistant, although he was fired days before his arrest.
Kohberger pleaded guilty in July 2025 for murders Ethan Chapin. Xana Kernodle. Madison Mogen and Kayleee goncalves In 1122 King Road in Moscow, Idaho, in the early hours of the November 13, 2022. Judge sentenced him to Four consecutive life sentences After pleading guilty, he removed the death penalty.
In the time since the murders have an Idaho province release There were more than 500 pages of documents related to the investigation, including interview accounts with those in Washington State who interacted regularly with Kohberger.
Keep scrolling for the biggest disclosures by the students and teachers in his program.
After the murders, students and faculty notice visible injuries on the hands of Kohberger. One student told the police he had broken on his hand “similar to cat scratches.” Another said he had a “bloody ankle,” although that student was uncertain who made the observation immediately before or after the killings.
A teacher also remembered seeing Kohberger’s hand being banded around the time of manslaughter, and Kohberger told her that he was because of “a silly accident inside.”
Students noticed several changes that seemed harmless to Kohberger’s behavior after November 13, 2022. For one, he stopped bringing his phone to class, which classmates assumed he used to take notes. Instead, he used his laptop.
The same student also said that the clean shaving Kohberger had usually started growing facial hair and appeared “disheveled.” Despite the weather he did not call for a jacket, he said he would wear a heavy coat throughout their three -hour class together.
Due to the nature of the criminology program, Idaho’s murders were often brought up in class. Although Kohberger was usually an active participant in class discussions, he did not take part when the subject rose.
A female student claims that other women in the criminology program have complained that Kohberger “would make them uncomfortable.” This included “numerous” cases of him staring at female classmates or “spatial trapping” in the student offices.
A teacher also had a similar interaction where Kohberger was claimed to have been cornered in a hallway because she had not given him 100 percent for participation that week.
Bryan Kohberger
Photo by Monroe County Correction Facility via Getty ImagesSeveral students interviews included accusations that Kohberger would be “Mansplain” course material for women in his class – a concept that he claimed did not exist. In one event, a student claims to have become “excited and controversial” while she was discussing the step -recognizing eye. The exchange left her uncomfortable, who filed a written complaint with the University.
In another case, a student says that Kohberger has tried to correct it in the class by overlooking the subject as if he did not understand. Kohberger became controversial again, and the student left the class early because of the interaction.
Another student complained to a teacher that Kohberger had left her in tears after making sexist comments as he was mansplaining as her.
Kohberger’s OD behavior caught the attention of one student who told the police that he was almost reported to the University but decided not to because the report would not be anonymous. The student noticed that Kohberger was clearly deprived of sleep, often late for lectures and would often rise and leave in the middle of the class, only to return with coffee.
Bryan Kohberger
Photo Ap/Kyle Green, PoolAt a staff meeting, a female faculty member told her colleagues that Kohberger was “insightful enough that we will have to give him a PhD in four years” but warn them of his problem behavior.
“Mark my word, I work with predators, if we give it a PhD, that’s the guy we hear harassment, stalking and sexually abusing in many years when he is a teacher … his students at university wherever,” said the teacher.
A student says that Kohberger was the only person in her class support the death penalty. In an attempt to argue his post, she asked the student if he would support putting someone to death who “raped and murdered” her 12 -year -old daughter.
Kohberger told another student that whoever committed Idaho’s murders must be “pretty good” in a conversation about three weeks after the murders. Kohberger praised the murderer for timing because he was just before the students left for the winter holidays.