Idaho Murder Suspect Bryan Kohberger - arrest warrant affadavit

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of the roommates being blamed.


And? What if your daughter's roommate did nothing while your kid got murdered. She was safely locked in her room. Her inaction for seven hours inexcusable.



She lived in a party house with a bunch of roommates, and drunken shenanigans at all hours. She knew enough to feel nervous but obviously never imagined MURDERS were taking place. Ffs some of you people are heartless.


+1 it's been hard for my brain to take me back there, at first when I read the report I was pretty horrified and confused. But if you really take yourself back to a super crazy party house in college with lots of roommates (which it was reported this house was even before the affadavit, it was the house where lots of people were coming and going), you can sort of get in the headspace where she assumed it was a weird hook up and he'd left. I don't know how close she was to the roommate, I was usually close to my roommates so would have gone to check if they are ok. But post college I lived in a house with 5 people and I didn't know all of them that well, so i maybe wouldn't have been as comfortable? I mean personally I'm always the one that calls 911 even in college I was the friend being like uhh something is wrong here and dealing with it, that being said I had plenty of friends who are nice people who I can imagine being very passive in a situation like this. Also, masks aren't that weird now... which is a factor.

Yeah, I lived in a house with three other guys and two girls for two years in undergrad. I encountered a number of different strangers in the house (both male and female) leaving my housemates' rooms, at all hours of the day. After a night of drinking, I don't think I would have mentally processed the situation as a murderer leaving the house.


This. I feel like some people do not remember what college was like?


Yep! Did you all not live in group homes in college? I lived with between 4 and 12 people at various points. All sorts of significant others and friends were coming and going. I locked my bedroom and tuned it all out.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of the roommates being blamed.


And? What if your daughter's roommate did nothing while your kid got murdered. She was safely locked in her room. Her inaction for seven hours inexcusable.



She lived in a party house with a bunch of roommates, and drunken shenanigans at all hours. She knew enough to feel nervous but obviously never imagined MURDERS were taking place. Ffs some of you people are heartless.


+1 it's been hard for my brain to take me back there, at first when I read the report I was pretty horrified and confused. But if you really take yourself back to a super crazy party house in college with lots of roommates (which it was reported this house was even before the affadavit, it was the house where lots of people were coming and going), you can sort of get in the headspace where she assumed it was a weird hook up and he'd left. I don't know how close she was to the roommate, I was usually close to my roommates so would have gone to check if they are ok. But post college I lived in a house with 5 people and I didn't know all of them that well, so i maybe wouldn't have been as comfortable? I mean personally I'm always the one that calls 911 even in college I was the friend being like uhh something is wrong here and dealing with it, that being said I had plenty of friends who are nice people who I can imagine being very passive in a situation like this. Also, masks aren't that weird now... which is a factor.

Yeah, I lived in a house with three other guys and two girls for two years in undergrad. I encountered a number of different strangers in the house (both male and female) leaving my housemates' rooms, at all hours of the day. After a night of drinking, I don't think I would have mentally processed the situation as a murderer leaving the house.


Agreed. I lived in a big shared house in undergrad too and there were always people coming and going. Parties, hookups, breakups, meltdowns about school or sports, you name it. If I got woken up by a commotion after a late night of drinking I would have locked my room door so no drunks stumbled in, put in earplugs, and cranked the fan for white noise. I would never have assumed that my roommates had been harmed, let alone murdered.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of the roommates being blamed.


And? What if your daughter's roommate did nothing while your kid got murdered. She was safely locked in her room. Her inaction for seven hours inexcusable.



She lived in a party house with a bunch of roommates, and drunken shenanigans at all hours. She knew enough to feel nervous but obviously never imagined MURDERS were taking place. Ffs some of you people are heartless.


No, I read the evidence. It's heartless to hide in your room like a coward.


np here, We don't know additional details yet. A couple weeks ago, people were all upset that the Idaho police weren't doing anything to find a suspect. Turns out we all don't know what is actually going on. Now everyone is jumping all over the roommate. She gave a very detailed description that is helpful in identifying Kohberger. Maybe we will hear why she waited to call 911. Loud commotion at a busy frat house is normal, people were always coming and going from there.


The details are in the affidavit, it's been released


I mean all the details that will come out in the court proceedings. There will be more affidavits by witnesses including the roommate, also more evidence. This affidavit is just the start.

How helpful can the roommate be if she was alcohol poisoned? How many facts would she realistically remember?


She wasn’t alcohol poisoned. She remembers the events.

You don’t know how much alcohol she had, or exactly what her condition was.
Anonymous
The roommate was lucky not to be killed as well you freaking ghouls. The person responsible is likely the man they arrested (barring unforeseen revelations).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of the roommates being blamed.


And? What if your daughter's roommate did nothing while your kid got murdered. She was safely locked in her room. Her inaction for seven hours inexcusable.



She lived in a party house with a bunch of roommates, and drunken shenanigans at all hours. She knew enough to feel nervous but obviously never imagined MURDERS were taking place. Ffs some of you people are heartless.


+1 it's been hard for my brain to take me back there, at first when I read the report I was pretty horrified and confused. But if you really take yourself back to a super crazy party house in college with lots of roommates (which it was reported this house was even before the affadavit, it was the house where lots of people were coming and going), you can sort of get in the headspace where she assumed it was a weird hook up and he'd left. I don't know how close she was to the roommate, I was usually close to my roommates so would have gone to check if they are ok. But post college I lived in a house with 5 people and I didn't know all of them that well, so i maybe wouldn't have been as comfortable? I mean personally I'm always the one that calls 911 even in college I was the friend being like uhh something is wrong here and dealing with it, that being said I had plenty of friends who are nice people who I can imagine being very passive in a situation like this. Also, masks aren't that weird now... which is a factor.

Yeah, I lived in a house with three other guys and two girls for two years in undergrad. I encountered a number of different strangers in the house (both male and female) leaving my housemates' rooms, at all hours of the day. After a night of drinking, I don't think I would have mentally processed the situation as a murderer leaving the house.


This. I feel like some people do not remember what college was like?


Yep! Did you all not live in group homes in college? I lived with between 4 and 12 people at various points. All sorts of significant others and friends were coming and going. I locked my bedroom and tuned it all out.


I did but they were my friends. If i suspected something weird was going on I would check on them. Or at least be like “omg who was that guy!?”

I thought they were all friends but apparently not
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of the roommates being blamed.


And? What if your daughter's roommate did nothing while your kid got murdered. She was safely locked in her room. Her inaction for seven hours inexcusable.



She lived in a party house with a bunch of roommates, and drunken shenanigans at all hours. She knew enough to feel nervous but obviously never imagined MURDERS were taking place. Ffs some of you people are heartless.


+1 it's been hard for my brain to take me back there, at first when I read the report I was pretty horrified and confused. But if you really take yourself back to a super crazy party house in college with lots of roommates (which it was reported this house was even before the affadavit, it was the house where lots of people were coming and going), you can sort of get in the headspace where she assumed it was a weird hook up and he'd left. I don't know how close she was to the roommate, I was usually close to my roommates so would have gone to check if they are ok. But post college I lived in a house with 5 people and I didn't know all of them that well, so i maybe wouldn't have been as comfortable? I mean personally I'm always the one that calls 911 even in college I was the friend being like uhh something is wrong here and dealing with it, that being said I had plenty of friends who are nice people who I can imagine being very passive in a situation like this. Also, masks aren't that weird now... which is a factor.

Yeah, I lived in a house with three other guys and two girls for two years in undergrad. I encountered a number of different strangers in the house (both male and female) leaving my housemates' rooms, at all hours of the day. After a night of drinking, I don't think I would have mentally processed the situation as a murderer leaving the house.


This. I feel like some people do not remember what college was like?


A lot of us didn't actually live like that in college.


And even if you didn't live like that, you never witnessed anyone who did?

I was comparatively tame, but certainly saw plenty of heavy drinking where anything was possible.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of the roommates being blamed.


And? What if your daughter's roommate did nothing while your kid got murdered. She was safely locked in her room. Her inaction for seven hours inexcusable.



She lived in a party house with a bunch of roommates, and drunken shenanigans at all hours. She knew enough to feel nervous but obviously never imagined MURDERS were taking place. Ffs some of you people are heartless.


No, I read the evidence. It's heartless to hide in your room like a coward.


np here, We don't know additional details yet. A couple weeks ago, people were all upset that the Idaho police weren't doing anything to find a suspect. Turns out we all don't know what is actually going on. Now everyone is jumping all over the roommate. She gave a very detailed description that is helpful in identifying Kohberger. Maybe we will hear why she waited to call 911. Loud commotion at a busy frat house is normal, people were always coming and going from there.


The details are in the affidavit, it's been released


I mean all the details that will come out in the court proceedings. There will be more affidavits by witnesses including the roommate, also more evidence. This affidavit is just the start.

How helpful can the roommate be if she was alcohol poisoned? How many facts would she realistically remember?


She wasn’t alcohol poisoned. She remembers the events.

You don’t know how much alcohol she had, or exactly what her condition was.


Well we know that she remembers details about what she heard and saw, so she wasn’t blackout drunk. Did you actually read the affidavit?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The original reports were that one of the roommates came outside at noon and fainted and that led to the 911 call. I am not sure the roommate every called 911.

My guess is that she was intoxicated enough to be unsure what was really happening and second guessing what she saw. She knew something was off but not what - a bit of crying, a dog barking, a couple weird comments, a stranger in the house. She ended up falling asleep (due to drinking) and woke up the next morning. Tried texting her roommates and got no reply and got scared to come out now putting 2 and 2 together that those things last night must have meant something. Eventually came out of her room, saw the bodies, went outside and fainted and someone called 911


This makes the most sense.


Nobody fainted. That was weird speculation based on reports that the 911 caller called to report someone “unresponsive” or “unconscious.” It was the victims who were unresponsive.

I don’t know, thinking about this more, the victims were obviously stabbed so someone calling to report their bodies wouldn’t have just said they were unconscious or unresponsive.


Disagree. The one roomate (who saw the murderer) had a room on the same floor as the couple. And per the affadavit, the body of the female from the couple could be partially seen before entering the room. So she opened her door the next morning, saw part of her roomate's body from the hallway and was afraid to look any closer and ran outside. At that point all she knew was that one person was "unresponsive."


That would be an odd response to thinking your roommate passed out on the floor. A house of girls who party a lot aren't going to be freaked out by a passed out friend. They would go to help her and see if she was okay. If they couldn't see blood and just thought she was passed out, they wouldn't be scared to go closer.


Your friends were regularly passed out partially into the hallway? Really?
Anonymous
Note to self: no large group homes for DD in college.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else think that it might come out that the roommate was complicit in this? Remember Kohlberger's first question when they got him ..."Did you arrest anyone else?"

No, that’s stupid. He’s a master manipulator!

You find it hard to believe he could have manipulated a practically teenaged girl then?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else think that it might come out that the roommate was complicit in this? Remember Kohlberger's first question when they got him ..."Did you arrest anyone else?"

I’m one to speculate all things true crime, and this is my thought as well.

Could the Door Dash have been a sign of some sort? When the Door Dasher arrives, that’s your sign everyone else is asleep?


The door dash was ordered by one of the victims, this has been verfied. The victim wasn't in on it, now was she?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of the roommates being blamed.


And? What if your daughter's roommate did nothing while your kid got murdered. She was safely locked in her room. Her inaction for seven hours inexcusable.



She lived in a party house with a bunch of roommates, and drunken shenanigans at all hours. She knew enough to feel nervous but obviously never imagined MURDERS were taking place. Ffs some of you people are heartless.


+1 it's been hard for my brain to take me back there, at first when I read the report I was pretty horrified and confused. But if you really take yourself back to a super crazy party house in college with lots of roommates (which it was reported this house was even before the affadavit, it was the house where lots of people were coming and going), you can sort of get in the headspace where she assumed it was a weird hook up and he'd left. I don't know how close she was to the roommate, I was usually close to my roommates so would have gone to check if they are ok. But post college I lived in a house with 5 people and I didn't know all of them that well, so i maybe wouldn't have been as comfortable? I mean personally I'm always the one that calls 911 even in college I was the friend being like uhh something is wrong here and dealing with it, that being said I had plenty of friends who are nice people who I can imagine being very passive in a situation like this. Also, masks aren't that weird now... which is a factor.

Yeah, I lived in a house with three other guys and two girls for two years in undergrad. I encountered a number of different strangers in the house (both male and female) leaving my housemates' rooms, at all hours of the day. After a night of drinking, I don't think I would have mentally processed the situation as a murderer leaving the house.


This. I feel like some people do not remember what college was like?

Yeah, we were young, full of hormones, often drunk, and believed we were indestructible.

When you lived in a decrepit old group house with 4-6 other people in their early 20's, seeing a stranger in the house elicits a different response than seeing someone like that in the the house you share with your spouse and kids.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else think that it might come out that the roommate was complicit in this? Remember Kohlberger's first question when they got him ..."Did you arrest anyone else?"

I’m one to speculate all things true crime, and this is my thought as well.

Could the Door Dash have been a sign of some sort? When the Door Dasher arrives, that’s your sign everyone else is asleep?


The victim is the one who ordered Door Dash.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The roommate was lucky not to be killed as well you freaking ghouls. The person responsible is likely the man they arrested (barring unforeseen revelations).


Agreed. 19 pages of an affidavit and people just want to hate the roommate. I don't get it. I'm curious to hear what comes out through the court proceedings, but not assuming anything.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of the roommates being blamed.


And? What if your daughter's roommate did nothing while your kid got murdered. She was safely locked in her room. Her inaction for seven hours inexcusable.



She lived in a party house with a bunch of roommates, and drunken shenanigans at all hours. She knew enough to feel nervous but obviously never imagined MURDERS were taking place. Ffs some of you people are heartless.


No, I read the evidence. It's heartless to hide in your room like a coward.


np here, We don't know additional details yet. A couple weeks ago, people were all upset that the Idaho police weren't doing anything to find a suspect. Turns out we all don't know what is actually going on. Now everyone is jumping all over the roommate. She gave a very detailed description that is helpful in identifying Kohberger. Maybe we will hear why she waited to call 911. Loud commotion at a busy frat house is normal, people were always coming and going from there.


The details are in the affidavit, it's been released


I mean all the details that will come out in the court proceedings. There will be more affidavits by witnesses including the roommate, also more evidence. This affidavit is just the start.

How helpful can the roommate be if she was alcohol poisoned? How many facts would she realistically remember?


She wasn’t alcohol poisoned. She remembers the events.

You don’t know how much alcohol she had, or exactly what her condition was.


Well we know that she remembers details about what she heard and saw, so she wasn’t blackout drunk. Did you actually read the affidavit?

Well, how drunk was she?
Apparently drunk enough to not immediately call 911 because her friends are dead.
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