Kohberger, 30, currently remains locked up at the Idaho Maximum Security prison, where he is expected to live out the rest of his life.
He was convicted after being arrested for the 2022 murders of four students, 21-year-olds Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves and their 20-year-old roommate Xana Kernodle and her boyfriend Ethan Chapin, also 20.
All four students were murdered at an off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho, on November 13.
Kohberger initially pleaded not guilty to the slayings before taking a plea deal, which saw him admit to the killings and avoid the death penalty.

Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin were murdered in their Idaho home (Instagram/@kayleegoncalves)
Kohberger’s sister, Melissa, has now spoken out about her brother and addressed one moment that stuck out to people when he was being sentenced.
The 34-year-old explained why he was sentenced with a black heart drawing in his possession.
Speaking to the New York Times, the psychologist, who lives in New Jersey, said she had sent her younger brother the heart ahead of his July sentencing to show his family still loved him.
According to the outlet, she wanted the drawing to convey the fact that the family had not disowned him. Her drawing was reportedly photocopied and given to Kohberger.
As well as this, Melissa also noted that she had discussed the murders with Kohberger prior to his arrest, seemingly unaware that he was the culprit.
She said that she had called her brother after the story broke and warned him due to him having a fondness for going for late-night jogs and leaving his doors unlocked.
Melissa said she told him: “Bryan, you are running outside, and this psycho killer is on the loose. Be careful.”
Kohberger apparently told her that he would be safe.

Bryan Kohberger’s sister Melissa has spoken about the conversations she has had with him about the murders (Kyle Green-Pool/Getty Images)
The second time they had discussed the murders was the following month, after Kohberger had driven his car across the country to spend Christmas with his family in Pennsylvania.
She noted that Kohberger mentioned in passing that the police in Idaho were ‘still hunting for the killer’.
Melissa also explained that she is still in contact with her brother behind bars, and the pair indulge his ongoing curiosity with psychology.
She said her family fully accepts the gravity and evil of Kohberger’s crimes and noted that whenever she feels overwhelmed by the situation, she reminds herself that the victims’ families have it much worse than she does.
Featured Image Credit: Kyle Green-Pool/Getty Images
Topics: Bryan Kohberger, News, US News, Crime

Bryan Kohberger’s sentencing hearing heard various statements from the families of Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, Kaylee Goncalves, and Madison Mogen, including a particularly fiery one from Alivea Goncalves.
Bryan Kohberger was sentenced to life in prison by a judge on July 23 for the murders of the four Idaho college students, who were found dead at their residence in 2022.
Last month, Kohberger, 30, changed his plea to guilty and accepted a plea deal, which allowed him to avoid the possibility of ending up on death row, as well as a scheduled August trial.
At the hearing, the families of Chapin, Kernodle, Gonclaves, and Mogen, as well as Bethany Funke and Dylan Mortensen, who were also in the home at the time of the murders, gave their victim statements to the court.
Kaylee’s father, Steve Gonclaves, gave a brief but heartbreaking statement, however, her sister, Alivea, was more brutal in hers.

Alivea and Steve Goncalves both gave statements at Bryan Kohberger’s sentencing (Kyle Green/Pool/Getty Images)
She began her statement by saying she wasn’t here to ‘to speak in grief’, but ‘to speak in truth’, adding: “My sister Kaylee and her best friend Maddie were not yours to take. They were not yours to study, to stalk or to silence.
“They’re everything you could never be: loved, accepted, vibrant, accomplished, brave and powerful. They would’ve been kind to you. If you had approached them in their everyday lives, they would’ve given you directions, thanked you for the compliment. … In a world that rejected you, they would’ve shown mercy.”
Alivea went on to call Kohberger a ‘coward’ and ‘a delusional, pathetic, hypochondriac loser who thought you were so much smarter than everybody else’.
She continued: “Lurking in the shadows made you feel powerful because no one ever paid you any attention in the light.
“You thought you were exceptional all because of a grade on a paper, you thought you were elite because your online IQ test, from 2010, told you that.
“All of that effort to seem important, it is desperate. There is a name for your condition thought, your inflated ego just didn’t let you see it. Wannabe.”
She said that if Kohberger hadn’t ‘attacked the students in their sleep’, ‘Kaylee would’ve kicked your f****** ass.”

Bryan Kohberger sat emotionless as he listened to the statements from the victims’ families (Kyle Green-Pool/Getty Images)
Adding that Kohberger wasn’t ‘special or deep, not mysterious or exceptional’, Alivea said that ‘no one is scared of you today’.
“The truth is, the scariest part about you is how painfully average you turned out to be. The truth is, you’re as dumb as they come, stupid, clumsy, slow, sloppy, weak, dirty.
Let me be very clear. Don’t ever try to convince yourself you mattered just because someone finally said your name out loud.
“I see through you.”
Mortensen said in her statement that ‘what happened that night changed everything’, adding: “Because of him, four beautiful, genuine, compassionate people were taken from this world for no reason.”
Meanwhile, Funke said she ‘carried so much regret and guilt for not knowing what had happened and not calling right away’, as she continued to say that she’d ‘not only lost some of my best friends, but I also lost a sister’.
Featured Image Credit: Getty Images/Pool
Topics: News, US News, Bryan Kohberger, Crime

Here is everything we know about the Idaho murders as Bryan Kohberger has accepted a controversial plea deal.
The criminology graduate is due to be sentenced next month, after being charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary.
In 2022, he killed University of Idaho students Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves, both aged 21, as well as 20-year-olds Ethan Chapin and Xana Kernodle.
Now, the 30-year-old suspect is understood to have accepted a judge’s plea deal which would mean he’d serve four consecutive life sentences as well as a maximum penalty of 10 years for the burglary charge. Kohberger previously pleaded not guilty to charges of murder.
It would mean he’d be spared the death penalty – something that the victims’ families, particularly Goncalves’, are furious about. They have accused the Latah County Prosecutor’s Office of rushing the case which they allege has been ‘mishandled’.
Meanwhile, a motive for the murders has still not been determined.

The murders took place in November 2022 (Instagram/kayleegoncalves)
Just days after the murders, one of Kohberger’s neighbors from Washington State University’s Pullman campus told CBS news how he ‘asked if I had heard about the murders, which I did’.
The neighbor continued: “And then he said, ‘Yeah, seems like they have no leads. Seems like it was a crime of passion.’
“At the time of our conversation, it was only a few days after it happened, so there wasn’t much details out.”
Here’s everything we know and what will happen next as the case progresses…
The evening of the murders
At around 9pm on November 12, 2022, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin attend a Sigma Chi fraternity party, just a short walk from the King Road house.
Meanwhile, Kaylee Goncalves uploads Instagram photos with friends, captioned: “One lucky girl to be surrounded by these ppl everyday.”
Around 10 pm, Madison Mogen and Goncalves head to the Corner Club sports bar in downtown Moscow.
At about 1:30am, Goncalves and Mogen are caught on a food-truck livestream ordering late-night snacks.
Attack and discovery

A make-shift memorial set up near the victims’ home where they were murdered (David Ryder/Getty Images)
On November 13 at 1:45 am, Kernodle and Chapin return to the three-level King Road house, Moscow. Goncalves and Mogen arrive by car at 1:56 am.
At 11.58 am, two surviving housemates, Bethany Funke and Dylan Mortensen, place a 911 call reporting an ‘unconscious person.’ They were unharmed but discover their roommates fatally stabbed.
Police initially say there’s no ongoing community risk, then, after re-examining the scene, warn that the unknown suspect remains at large.
Early investigation
Moscow PD and Idaho State Police (with FBI support) confirm four victims, likely attacked with a large knife while asleep.
Autopsy shows multiple stab wounds and defensive injuries, while detectives seize nearby dumpsters for evidence, canvass local businesses for knife purchases, and emphasize it was a targeted attack.
On November 30, a vigil at the University of Idaho takes place; families vow to ‘get our justice’.
Days later, survivors Funke and Mortensen release letters describing their grief.
Suspect arrested and charged

Bryan Kohberger has accepted a plea deal (Ted S. Warren-Pool/Getty Images)
On December 30, 2022, in Pennsylvania, at around 3am, police knock on the Kohbergers’ door. The 28-year-old is arrested on a fugitive warrant.
At the time, he’d just completed his first semester as a Ph.D. teaching assistant in Criminology at Washington State University’s Pullman campus – only a 15-minute drive from Moscow – and lived in an on-campus apartment and office that WSU Police searched under warrant.
DNA evidence (knife sheath) and cellphone-tower data had linked him to the crime scene.
Between Jan 3 and 5 2023, Kohberger waives extradition and is flown to Idaho. At his first appearance he’s ordered held without bail on four counts of first-degree murder and felony burglary.
Pretrial motions and venue changes
- May 16, 2023: Latah County grand jury indicts on the murder and burglary charges.
- May 22, 2023: Arraignment – Kohberger remains silent; judge enters not-guilty pleas.
- June 26, 2023: Prosecutors announce they will seek the death penalty.
- Sept 12, 2024: Idaho Supreme Court orders the trial moved from Latah County to Ada County (Boise).
- Oct 8, 2024: Judge Hippler sets the trial to begin Aug 11, 2025.
Curve-ball plea deal
On June 30, Kohberger accepts a judge-approved plea: four consecutive life sentences plus up to 10 years on the burglary count – avoiding the death penalty.
Victims’ families decry the Latah County Prosecutor’s Office for a ‘secretive,’ rushed process, learning of the plea only one day before the scheduled July 2 hearing and without being consulted.
They’re now preparing to appeal the sentence.
What’s next
The scheduled jury selection – originally set for July 30 – and trial start – Aug 18 – will be vacated. Formal sentencing hearings and the families’ appeal will determine the next steps.
Featured Image Credit: Zach Wilkinson-Pool/Getty Images















