Bryan Kohberger Investigated for 2021 Break-In Before Idaho Murders
Bryan Kohberger was the subject of an investigation in the context of an armed break -in a year before fatally stabbing four students from the Idaho University.
According to files from the Pullman Police Service obtained by NBC NewsThe authorities investigated a break -in in 2021 in a Pullman house, Washington, just in front of the Moscow line, Idaho.
An individual masked to brandishing knives would have burst into a house of four sisters of sorority at 3:30 am and stood on one of their beds, according to documents published by the city of Pullman.
A witness told the authorities that the person had fled the premises after kicking the stomach, police files said.
The files show that the authorities investigated a neighbor but had no probable cause to take it into police custody.
A police official instructed a sergeant to find out if Kohberger could have been in the region at the time for an event on the campus for potential graduate students.
According to NBC News, police said the case “inactive” after a coordinator of the school’s criminology department confirmed that there was no recruitment event at the time of break -in and that the school was not aware of any visit to Kohberger.
The Pullman incident occurred eight months before Kohberger officially moved to study criminology at Washington State University. He has never been arrested or accused of a crime related to the break -in.

Bryan Kohberger
AP photo / Kyle Green, swimming poolEverything changed to Kohberger in 2022, however, when he was arrested and accused of four heads of first degree and burglary murder after having broken into a home in Moscow, Idaho, with the intention of committing a crime.
After his first non -guilty plea, Kohberger pleaded guilty to the murders of the Idaho University in an agreement to avoid the death penalty. He was sentenced in July to four lives in prison.
Mad,, Kaylee Goncalves,, Xana Kernodle And Ethan Chapin were stabbed to death, while roommates Dylan Mortensen And Bethany Funke survived the incident that made the headlines across the country.
Before the conviction of Kohberger, Mortensen delivered a Declaration of impact of the emotional victim And explained how the death of his friends changed his life forever.
“What happened that night has changed everything,” she said through tears, according to CBS News. “Because of him, four beautiful, authentic and compassionate have been taken from this world without reason. What he broke me in places that I did not know could break. I should have understood who I was. I should have had the university experience and start to establish my future.
During the conviction, judge Steven Hippler also shared a few words and insisted that no parent will find himself buried a child.
“This unfathomable and insane act of harm caused immeasurable pain,” he said. “It is the largest tragedy that can be inflicted on a person.”
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