Bryan Kohberger, University of Idaho
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Bryan Kohberger faced emotional statements from victims' families in Boise courtroom, including scathing rebukes and one offer of forgiveness before receiving life sentences.
Idaho prosecutor Bill Thompson says whether Bryan Kohberger received life in prison or the death penalty, Kohberger will “be in prison until he dies.” NBC News’ Liz Kreutz asks Thompson how the plea deal in the University of Idaho murder case came to be.
Brian Kohberger faced fury from the loved ones of his victims — including a woman who was in the house the night of the murders — even while his motive remains a mystery.
A University of Idaho roommate who survived Bryan Kohberger’s vicious massacre faced the killer for the first time since she saw him and his “bushy eyebrows” the night of the killing — and described him as an “evil” and empty coward during emotional impact statements.
Kim Kernodle, the aunt of Idaho murder victim Xana Kernodle, speaks at the Bryan Kohberger sentencing about how her family is united amid tragedy.
In the days after murdering four University of Idaho students in an off-campus home, Bryan Kohberger’s behavior shifted dramatically and investigators would later find that he had fixated on news coverage of the killings and began paying for items in cash – often wearing gloves – as he avoided the area of the murders.
The so-called doomsday mom was found guilty of two counts of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder in two separate trials in Maricopa County.