Prosecutors of Idaho have unveiled a university yard of student murders suspected Bryan Kherberger who shows that he knows his way around a crime scene, reveal new court applications.
In the Missive, written in 2020 during the final for a Criminal Justice course at 300 level, Kherberger described how researchers of the crime scene use “fiber -free” overalls, gloves and boots to prevent the location with their own DNA and fingerprints.
On 1122 King Road, where he reportedly killed four students from the University of Idaho in November 2022, the police unveiled little evidence, apart from a ka-bar Messchede under one of the victims who reportedly had the DNA of Kohberger.
Before the FBI identified him as a person important through research genetic genealogy, his name was unknown to detectives.
He went to other aspects of an investigation into a crime scene, but repeatedly referred to measures that the police should take to protect the location, shared his thoughts about indirect evidence, identified domestic partners as potential suspects and warned that crime scenes could be increased.
“Public prosecutors will talk about this when they mention the lack of forensic evidence that the murderer has left,” said Joseph Giacalone, a former researcher of the NYPD Cold Case and Professor in Penn State-Lehigh Valley.
“They are going to say,” Look how much he knew about this. He talks about fiber -free clothing. “
Kherberger called fiber -free overalls, shoe covers, gloves, hair nets and more when talking about protective equipment that a researcher should wear to prevent a scene from polluting.
“This is not useful for him,” said Giacalone.
“In the same way as he talks about this fictional agent about not leaving evidence … we may have a little insight into how, or at least an answer, the lack of forensic evidence was left behind,” Giacalone told Fox News Digital. “He does not call it by name, but the exchange principle of Locard, the theory of the transfer between all evidence, he talks a number of times about the transfer of evidence.”
But Kherberger also made some mistakes in the play, Giacalone said.
“He said that staging is common,” Giacalone told Fox News Digital. “It is not common. You know, most things that happen when crimes place are mistakes or just panic mode.”
He also does not believe that if he committed the crimes as claimed, he would have had time to organize the scene after killing four people in about 15 minutes and then an eyewitness on his way to the outside, which he did not attack.
“I think he didn’t see her,” he said. “So the staging part of this, I don’t find it plausible for him in that scenario.”
Kherberger, who argued through his lawyers that there was blood and DNA certificate at the house of the victims who can indicate potential alternative perpetrators, wrote in his essay that researchers of the crime scene do not have the responsibility to prove evidence.
“Even if an item has been introduced in the scene by a perpetrator to throw researchers, it is not the task of the criminal researcher who processes the crime scene to come to conclusion,” wrote Kherberger.
Giacalone said that if Kherberger hit the newspaper for one of his classes, he would probably give it a B.
“He knows a lot, but you can get this from any academic book,” said Giacalone. “You can learn about this, but putting it into practice and doing are two other things.”
Kherberger graduated from the University of University with a master’s degree and then went to Washington State University for a Ph.D. In criminology.
The school is only 10 miles away from the University of Idaho, where he is accused of entering a house at 4 am and four of the six students in on November 13, 2022.
The victims were Madison Mag, 21, Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and Ethan Chapin, 20.
The three young women were all roommates. Chapin lived in the neighborhood and went out with Kernodle.
The process of Kherberger about four charges of murder in the first degree and another burglary will start on 11 August. Jury selection is planned for July 30.
An earlier judge introduced non-guilty supplications on behalf of a preliminary guide in May 2023.
He could face the death penalty if he is convicted.
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