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ICYMI: Bryan Kohberger And The Bodycam Footage

Newly released bodycam footage taken during an incident at the roommates house on September 1st shows the house filled with people while the roommates are not home. With more context it starts to become a lot more clear that the task ahead of the investigators remains massive, as the home was obviously a well trafficked, often visited residence that has now become a crime scene.

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source:

Bodycam shows Moscow police responding to unrelated noise complaint at students home months before murders | The Independent

Duration:
13m
Broadcast on:
14 Jul 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

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See terms at racing.fanduel.com. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER. What's up, everyone, and welcome back to the program. Washington State University has released some footage of Brian Coburger being pulled over by one of the Washington State University police officers after a traffic infraction. Now, after Brian Coburger gets pulled over, he has a conversation with the officer that lasts about five minutes, and he's asking her, you know, a bunch of different questions about the law, what he should have done in that situation, and claiming that he has no idea about the driving rules in Washington, because he's from a rural part of Pennsylvania. After all is said and done, the police officer lets him off with a warning. But it's interesting to see Brian Coburger in action here and hear him talk to the police officer and interact on video, considering he's pretty much an enigma, right? We haven't heard any interviews with him, nothing like that. So whenever we can get some video footage of Coburger talking to the cops or whatever, it certainly adds a little bit of context. So, let's get into this article from Fox News, and let's see what's up. Headline, Brian Coburger is seen, a new body cam video, as Washington State University releases additional videos and documents. A Washington State University police officer pulls Brian Coburger over in his Hyundai Elantra roughly a month before the Idaho murders. This article was authored by Michael Ruiz, and he had been in Idaho, Washington, for quite some time at that point. You don't know the traffic laws yet, bro. You don't know that you can't pull out into the intersection and get caught in between, either make your move or don't pull out into the intersection, dumb, dumb. Brian Coburger is seen pushing back at a Washington State University police officer after an October traffic stop in newly released body cam video made public Thursday evening, giving a new glimpse of the prior life of a suspected quadruple murderer. I think you know why I stopped you, the officer tells Coburger you ran the red light. And in Coburger's response, he just can't help himself from trying to gaslight. What actually happened is I was stuck in the middle of the intersection. Coburger replies, "So I was forced to go to the left. What do you mean you were stuck? You were the one who pulled out into the intersection, right? So what does that even mean you were stuck there? Did some unseen force push your car out into the intersection? No, you drove out into the intersection, you got caught in no man's land, a cop was behind you, and you got nailed, enough with the gaslighting, enough with the crying that I don't know the traffic laws." "Yeah, I was behind you the whole time," the officer says. "You're not supposed to enter the intersection at all for that reason because if the light turns red, then you're stuck in the intersection. You would think that's pretty much common sense, right? And I don't care where you live, it's just common sense not to hang out in an intersection and cause a traffic jam." Coburger claimed he was unfamiliar with how to drive through crosswalks because he was from a rural part of Pennsylvania. Maybe he'll use that as his excuse for the murders as well. You know, I'm from a rural part of Pennsylvania. I didn't know that murdering people in their home was a bad idea. It never occurred to me that "I was actually doing something wrong," Coburger tells the officer. The officer explains to Coburger that under a Washington state law, drivers can't enter an intersection unless there's enough space for their vehicles on the opposite side. And when you watch the video, the cop was super cool throughout this whole entire exchange, way cool. And she even let him off with just a warning. Can you explain that to me just a little bit further? Coburger, a 28-year-old with a master's degree, and criminal justice, asked the officer during the encounter. So in Pennsylvania, when you're stuck in an intersection, you have to make the left. What would the appropriate thing for me to have done been? You're not supposed to block an intersection like that in Washington, she replies. He was eventually let off with a warning, so basically telling him, "Look, here's what you do. Go into the intersection and block it in the first place." "I do apologize if I was asking you too many questions about the law," Coburger says. The release also includes officers banging on his apartment door, December 30, announcing their presence before serving a search warrant. He was already in Pennsylvania where he was taken into custody by the state police and the FBI at his parents' house that same day. He's described Coburger's sparsely furnished apartment, previously unsealed court documents going to more detail about what police found in his apartment in Pullman, Washington. The new documents give a glimpse at what was missing. We also noticed, while clearing the apartment, it was sparsely furnished and fairly empty of belongings. Including no shower curtain in the bathroom and the trash cans appeared empty, wrote WSU assistant chief of police, Don Daniels, "Well, why would you want to keep the shower curtains if you got cleaned up in there?" He's smart enough to realize that those have to go, right? And he had plenty of time to get rid of evidence. After these murders, it took quite some time for him to be arrested. So he had plenty of time to get rid of any kind of evidence or anything he thought might have had evidence on it. And I think that's reflected by the fact that there was hardly anything in this apartment. He knew what was coming and he was prepared. The search of his office in the school's department of criminal justice and criminology turned up nothing. Fox News Digital has previously reported. The new documents reveal his desk was completely empty. In his apartment, police found hair samples, fabric with dark red stains, and a single black glove and other evidence. Now I wonder how much of that is going to be useful evidence for the investigators. Again, he had a lot of time to clean up his mess. He had a lot of time to get rid of this evidence, and he certainly had time to figure out a way to try and throw the investigators off as far as evidence collection. Police seized a single nitrite, type black glove, a Walmart receipt, and a Dickey's tag. Two receipts from a Marshall store, the dust container from a Bissell vacuum, eight possible hair strands, a fire TV stick, a single possible animal hair strand, four other possible hairs and a computer tower. They also found a dark red spot, two cuttings from an uncased pillow of reddish brown stain, and mattress covers with multiple stains. I don't even want to think about what those stains are considering this weirdo spent so much time alone. Lastly, the school released an official letter from the school, informing the suspected murderer and former PhD criminology student, he has no longer welcome on campus. It was signed by Coburger from his Idaho jail cell. Yeah, he has bigger problems than that, huh? I don't think he's too worried about the fact that he is a persona non grata on the campus of Washington State University anymore, considering the stakes. Coburger is accused of fatally stabbing four University of Idaho students, November 13. Their school is less than 10 miles from where a Coburger was studying. Victims Kaylie Gonsalves, Madison Mogan, Zanna Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin were found dead hours after a surviving roommate told police she heard strange noises and saw a masked man with bushy eyebrows leaving out the back door. According to police in Moscow, Idaho, he allegedly entered their house at 4 a.m. and massacred them with a large knife. At least some of the students were believed to have been sleeping at the start of the attack, according to the Laitau County Corner. We all have somewhere we're trying to get to. As the largest energy producer in Colorado, Chevron is helping meet rising demand, and we're working to do it responsibly. Our next-gen tankless facilities reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of our operations by more than 90 percent compared to our older designs. Working to provide Colorado with energy that's affordable, reliable, and ever cleaner. So everyone can get to where they want to be. 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So we know for a fact that Zana was awake during this attack, and it would seem likely that Ethan was either awake or awakened by the commotion. Police found the K-bar knife sheath at the apartment from which they recovered DNA which allegedly helped link Coburger to the killings. Police also identified the White Hyundai Elantra in which he was pulled over in October as the suspect vehicle in the November attack. Coburger is being held without bail in the Latah County Jail. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for June 26, and he has not yet entered a plea. Well, we know now that he's going to make an appearance in court a little bit sooner than that, but it's going to have to do with the gag order, not so much with the overall case itself. That will be addressed on June 26 at the prelim hearing, and that'll really be the signifying day where things are getting kicked off. Of course, it won't be the full trial, but it will be the first dip of the toe, if you will, in the pool. And once that gets here, that means the train of justice has left the station. But as we all know, the gears of justice grind slowly. So this is going to take some time. We're going to have the prelim in June, and then from there we'll have a little bit more of an idea about the lay of the land from there, because we'll have more information as far as from official sources, because with the gag order, it's very difficult to get anything out of anybody. So June 26 will be the time that we finally get some official word about what's going on in this case in this trial. And we will be here every single step of the way covering it as Brian Kohberger goes on trial for quadruple homicide. All right, folks, that's going to do it for this one. All of the information that goes with the episode can be found in the description box. When you look around your an official message from Medicare, a new law is helping me save more money on prescription drug costs. Maybe you can save too. 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