Bryan Kohberger’s behavior alarmed university faculty and students before Idaho murders, documents show

Bryan Kohberger developed a reputation for being “sexist” and “creepy” while attending a criminal justice program in the months before he killed four University of Idaho students in 2022, fellow grad students told investigators. 

More than 550 pages of investigation documents were recently released by Idaho State Police in response to public records requests. They include summaries of interviews with students and instructors at Washington State University, where Kohberger was a doctoral student in criminology.   

Kohberger’s behavior was so problematic that one Washington State University faculty member told co-workers that if he ever became a professor, he would likely stalk or sexually abuse his future students, according to the documents. She urged her co-workers to cut Kohberger’s funding to remove him from the program.

“He is smart enough that in four years we will have to give him a Ph.D.,” the woman told her colleagues, according to the report from Idaho State Police Detective Ryan O’Harra. She continued, “Mark my word, I work with predators, if we give him a Ph.D., that’s the guy that in that many years when he is a professor, we will hear is harassing, stalking, and sexually abusing … his students at wherever university.” 

Kohberger was sentenced to life in prison without parole last month for the stabbing murders of Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin at a rental home near the Moscow, Idaho, campus early on Nov. 13, 2022.  

The WSU faculty member told investigators that Kohberger would sometimes go into an office where several female grad students worked, physically blocking the door. Sometimes, she would hear one of the women say, “I really need to get out of here,” so she would intercede by going into the office to allow the student to leave.

The faculty member believed Kohberger was stalking people. She told police that someone had reportedly broken into a female graduate student’s apartment in September or October, stealing perfume and underwear.

An unnamed Ph.D. student who was in the same program as Kohberger told police that he enjoyed conflict, was disparaging toward women and that he especially liked to talk about sexual burglary — his field of study.

About three weeks after the murders, Kohberger told the Ph.D. student that whoever had committed the crimes “must have been pretty good,” Idaho State Police Detective Sgt. Michael Van Leuven wrote in a report. Kohberger also told the woman that the murders might have been a “one and done type thing,” Van Leuven wrote.

The woman “said she had never met anyone who acted in such a condescending manner and wondered why people in power in the department did not address his behavior,” Van Leuven wrote. “The way he spoke to females in the department was unsettling to them.”

One instructor told police that she was assigned to work with Kohberger on his doctoral program. In late August 2022, she said she began receiving complaints about him from students and staff in the criminal justice program.

The instructor told police that she spent “a lot of time” speaking about Kohberger during disciplinary meetings.

“The meetings focused around Kohberger’s interactions with fellow post-graduate students, in and out of the classroom, along with his behavior around some of the criminal justice professors,” according to an investigator’s report.

The school got nine separate complaints from faculty members, administration staffers and other students about his “rude and belittling behavior toward women,” Idaho State Police Detective Sean Prosser wrote in a report. In response, the school held a mandatory training class for all graduate students about behavior expectations.

Many of Kohberger’s fellow students and instructors at WSU did not suspect his involvement in the killings, according to the police reports. But at least one fellow student noticed his behavior changed after the murders.

The student said Kohberger frequently used his phone before the killings, but stopped bringing his cellphone to class after the murders. He also appeared more disheveled in the weeks after the killings, the student told police, and she thought it was odd that he never participated in conversations about the Moscow deaths.

She eventually called a police tip line to report that she had seen Kohberger with bloody knuckles just prior to the killings and his hand looked like he had been hitting something. 

Cellmates said Kohberger used 3 bars of soap a week and excessively washed his hands

Cellmates who were lodged with Kohberger in the Latah County Sheriff’s Office jail in Moscow after his arrest said he loved watching the news coverage about him. 

According to one cellmate, Kohberger said, “Wow, I’m on every channel.” Another cellmate told police that Kohberger enjoyed watching the news about his case unless it began talking about his family or friends, at which point he’d change the channel immediately. But as time went on, that cellmate said, he stopped watching the news related to his case almost completely.

Kohberger went through three standard-size bars of soap a week, both cellmates told police, took hourlong showers and excessively washed his hands, which were red from the amount of hand washing he did.

He also wanted new bedding and clothes every day, the second cellmate told police.

contributed to this report.


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