8 Biggest Mistakes Idaho Killer Suspect Bryan Kohberger Made, That Lead to His Arrest

The quadruple murder of four University of Idaho students has shocked the world. They were Kaylee Goncalves (21), Madison Mogen (21), Xana Kernodle (20), and Ethan Chapin (20). Bryan Kohberger was finally arrested seven weeks ago and charged with the horrific crimes. Experts claim that Bryan Kohberger didn’t commit the perfect crime despite the fact he was from Pennsylvania and was studying for his Ph.D.

Bill Daly, FBI Investigator, stated that he made every mistake you could make to Mark Fuhrman as a crime scene expert. Moscow Murders: Convicting A KillerFox Nation’s new special, “He Got In Over His Head.” “He got in his head.” According to experts, these are the eight greatest mistakes that the alleged killer made. 

1

He claimed to have committed the crimes indoors.

John Kelly, expert criminal profiler and psychotherapist, said that it was interesting to see how people talk about how smart he was. Fox News Digital. Criminology 101: “Looking at it through an investigative perspective and looking at his mistakes. To me, he looks like a moron.”

The biggest mistake? “If your goal is to kill or stalk someone, indoors is the best place,” he stated. “Because you have a much better chance of leaving evidence than an outside crime scene.”

2

He could have been a member of True Crime Groups.

Reports have surfaced that Kohberger may have inserted himself in online true crime groups on Reddit and Facebook. Kelly stated that any type of interjection, although it is psychological, can be caught by them. They think they can outsmart people but they don’t.

3

He claimed to have fled the State

Kelly said that “flight could be a sign to guilt.” Kohberger and his father drove Kohberger several weeks later from Washington to Pennsylvania. On the long trip there, he was pulled over. 

4

He claimed to have committed the crime in a “Death Penalty state” without the “Insanity Defense”.

Casey Jordan from Western Connecticut State University was a professor of justice law and justice. He pointed out that Kohberger committed the crimes in Idaho rather than on the Washington side of the border. If he is guilty, the biggest thing is that he is not in an insanity defense state. It’s the only one in the union without the insanity defense.

5

He didn’t switch off his phone.

Kohberger committed one of the greatest mistakes. Pete Yachmetz, a former FBI Agent who spent 30+ years as an agent before starting his security company, pointed to the fact that Kohberger had his cell phone on his person at all times. NY Post. According to the cell phone data and the arrest affidavit, he was at the King Road home on “at least 12 occasions” prior to November 13, 2022. This suggests that he was watching it.

“All of these instances, except one occurred in the late morning and early afternoon hours of their respective day,” the affidavit says. “He was evidently surveilling.” [the victims]Yachmetz said that the digital footprint suggested that the murders were premeditated. He also stated that because he was often present at the crime scene, profilers would label him as a highly organized offender who “planned and scripted every aspect” of the murders.

“[He was] Most likely, you are thinking [the crime] Through, imagining the fastest escape and entry route. While his phone was off during this two-hour period, investigators believe that the murders took places, his phone called Pullman, where it is located, at 2:47 AM. It remained silent until around 4:48 AM, only 18 minutes after police believe that the murders happened. Further incriminating is the fact that his phone ping placed him just south of Moscow, just before 5:47 a.m. He was heading west to return home. 

6

He allegedly left behind the leather knife sheath

Steve Busch, co-founder of the FBI Forensic Genetic Genealogy Team, said that he left his knife sheath as the “smoking pistol.” This is as close as you can get to a smoking gun, right? It’s right at the crime scene. It’s right next to the victim. “We have the one thing we know belongs to the suspect,” Busch told Mark Fuhrman, a host on a Fox Nation special.

“I believe that the sheath was found in Kaylee’s third-floor bedroom, Maddie and Kaylee, which is a clear indication that he began there. Are you in a rush or do you lose your sheath when you reach the third-floor? It could be that it was in your waistband, or in the pockets of a jacket and you forgot about it. You don’t even realize that you are already on the wrong path. “Why even bother bringing the sheath in?” Maureen O’Connell (retired FBI Special Agent) suggested this.

7

White Hyundai Elantra Was Supposed to be a “Rolling Crime Scene”.

A 2013 White Hyundai Elantra was one of the major pieces of evidence that investigators had to work with. It was found near the crime scene. While Kohberger managed to get a new license plate for the car, it remained a “rolling crime scene” after he drove it back home to Albrightsville, Pennsylvania – a last-ditch effort that failed miserably. Daly claims that this was his attempt at “parking it, cleaning it, and leaving it.” Investigators may have more evidence because Daly most likely got in the car with bloody hands.

“He came in with blood all over him. He left his shoes right in front D.M., so we know there was blood.’s [surviving roommate’s] door. We have blood on the car. It could be on the steering wheel or the handle of the door. So, we want the car. We don’t want to see it destroyed. Daly stressed that it is not possible to burn it. 

8

He claimed to have left behind a witness

Daly also noted that Taylor Mortensen was another big mistake. “A witness saw them. He said that he didn’t remove the witness. Mortensen claimed that she saw an athlete-looking man of about 5-foot-10, wearing black and “bushy eyebrows” in the house on the morning of the murders. 

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