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Brian Kohberger was sentenced to four consecutive living conditions in prison after admitting the murder of four Idah students in November 2022.
A 30-year-old former criminology student was without express in his orange orange, when he passed a few hours of emotional statements of the victims of the victims he killed at the hearing on Wednesday.
The case opened a small city of Moscow in college and captured a national audience when almost two months passed before Kohberger was arrested.
“I can’t find anything ransom in Mr. Kohberger,” said Judge Steven Hiipler, punishing. “His actions made him worse than the worst.”
In the early morning hours, on November 13, Kohberger stabbed Kylie Hancalves, Ethan Chapin, Xanana Carf and Madison Mohin at the campus. The two other room neighbors were not physically injured.
Authorities worked for more than six weeks to catch it using a sample of the DNA from the knife shell, which he left at the crime scene, as well as telephone records and footage of his white car.
In the end, Kohberger – who, according to the officials, visited the residence of students several times before the murder – was arrested at his family house in Pennsylvania on December 30. He also received a period of 10 years for theft.
On Wednesday, when asked by the judge whether he wants to speak, he replied: “I respect.” He had pleaded guilty to the transaction to avoid the death penalty.
The relatives of the four university students performed more than two hours at the hearing, sharing the injury that Kohberger caused his life.
Family members offered memories of their lost loved ones, describing four students as bright and compassionate. Their descriptions left a lot in court in tears, including the judge.
Madison Mogene was a man who listened carefully to others, his stepfather Scott Laram said in court.
“Karen and I are ordinary people, but we lived an unusual life because we had medical,” he said about him and his wife.
Christie Hancals, Kylie’s mother, told Kohberger that she had stolen her peace.
“You have changed my every invoice,” she said.
Some took the opportunity to express their fury with Kohberger, including Sister Kayly Hancalve, Olivey, who ordered the defendant to “sit straight” while she talked to him.
“You’re a textbook, a case of uncertainty. You’re not deep, you’re pathetic,” she said.
“You’re going to go to hell,” said Xana Kernodl Randy Davis.
But one woman, the aunt of the kernel, told Kohberger what she forgived him and what she wanted to answer.
“Every time you want to talk, I’m here for you,” she said.
The court also heard the statements of two students who slept in the house at night.
One of the room neighbors, Dylan Mortensen, saw the attacker in a ski mask in the hall when he was leaving.
When she said, when she said, Mrs. Mortensen told the court that she couldn’t sleep after the killings, too afraid to turn her eyes.
“People call me strong, they call me surviving, but do not see what my new reality looks like.
“He didn’t just take their lives, and he took the light they were transferred to each room,” she said about her four friends.
When Kohberger gave up on the performance, the three -hour hearing did not give answers, to which some relatives and members of the public had long hoped.
There are many questions related to this case – including why Kohberger, a student -dodar criminology student at Washington University, would come to another state campus to strictly apply four students.
After the verdict, the investigators reported in the media, despite the use of “possible resources”, they did not find any connection between Kohberger and his victims or the surviving room neighbors. There were no signs that he followed them in the social media, they added.
Judge Stephen HipPler said in court on Wednesday that he had the same questions himself, but they would probably never be answered.
“There is no reason for these crimes that could approach anything like rationality,” the judge said.
He said he no longer made sense to be “dependent on the defendant” to give them the cause of their crimes.
“Continuing to focus on why we continue to give Mr. Kohberger relevance,” he said. “Time to stop 15 minutes of glory g -na Kohberger.”