Newly Released Documents Detail Pre-Murder Warnings About Bryan Kohberger’s ‘Creepy’ Behavior

Newly Released Documents Detail Pre-Murder Warnings About Bryan Kohberger’s ‘Creepy’ Behavior

Newly Released Documents Detail Pre-Murder Warnings About Bryan Kohberger’s ‘Creepy’ Behavior

Newly Released Documents Detail Pre-Murder Warnings About Bryan Kohberger's 'Creepy' Behavior
Image from The Independent

Newly unsealed investigation documents from Idaho State Police reveal that Washington State University faculty and students expressed grave concerns about Bryan Kohberger’s “sexist and creepy” behavior months before he murdered four University of Idaho students in November 2022.

The more than 550 pages of police reports, released last week following public records requests, include interviews detailing Kohberger’s problematic conduct during his criminal justice doctoral program. One faculty member explicitly warned colleagues that if Kohberger ever became a professor, he would “likely stalk or sexually abuse his future students,” urging them to cut his funding to remove him from the program.

According to the reports, this faculty member observed Kohberger physically blocking doors to offices where female graduate students worked and often intervened to allow students to leave. She also suspected him of stalking and believed he might have been involved in a September 2022 break-in at a female student’s apartment where perfume and underwear were stolen.

Other students and instructors corroborated Kohberger’s unsettling behavior, describing him as condescending, disparaging toward women, and overly interested in “sexual burglary” – his field of study. Some speculated he might be an “incel” or a potential future rapist. The department received nine separate complaints about his rude and belittling conduct, leading to a mandatory training class for graduate students.

These revelations surface shortly after Kohberger, 28, was sentenced to life in prison without parole last month for the brutal stabbings of Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin.

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