Kohberger’s sexist, creepy behavior alarmed university faculty and students before Idaho murders

Boise, Idaho (AP) – Bryan Kohberger Graduated students, in 2022 in the months before killing the students of the University of Idaho, participated in a criminal justice program, while being sexist and creepy.
His behavior was so problematic that he said he would probably follow or sexually abuse his future students, if he became a professor to his colleagues, a professor of a Washington State University. He urged his colleagues to interrupt Kohberger’s funding to get him out of the program.
Idaho state police detective Ryan O’HARRA’nın report, according to the female colleagues, “he said in four years to have to do a doctor,” he said. “Mark my promise, I work with predators, if we give him a doctor, we will hear that we are harassing, followed and sexual harassment during the years he was a professor … Where are the students at the university?”
The summaries of the meetings with students and trainers at Washington State University were among more than 550 pages of investigation. Published by Idaho State Police In response to general registration requests last week.
Kohberger He was sentenced to life imprisonment in prison Last month without conditional release stabbing murders Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin, in the beginning of November 13, 2022 in a house near Moscow, Idaho, campus.
WSU faculty member inspectors Kohberger’in sometimes a few female undergraduate students work and physically blocking the door, he said. Sometimes he would hear that one of the women said, “I really need to get out of here ,, so he would intervene by entering the office to let the student leave.
He believed that faculty member Kohberger was following people. The police told the police that one was divided into a female graduate student in September or October and stole perfume and underwear.
The student who is in the same program as anonymous doctorate Kohberger said that he enjoyed the police from conflict, that he was humiliating against women and that he liked to talk about the field of study.
Some people in the department thought that he was a possible rapist in the future, and told the officer that he could be “landing ..
About three weeks after the murders, Kohberger, Ph.D. Idaho State Police Detective Sgt. Michael Van LeuVen wrote in a report. Kohberger also told the woman that the murders could be “one and a kind of thing ..
Van said Van Leuven said, “He said he had never met someone who moves so contemplating and wondered why the ruling people in the department did not deal with their behavior.” “The way they talk to women in the department was disturbing to them.”
An instructor told the police that he was assigned to work with Kohberger on a PhD program. At the end of August 2022, he said he started to complain about him from the students and staff in the Criminal Justice program.
The instructor told the police that he had a “a lot of time” by talking about Kohberger during the disciplinary meetings.
According to a researcher’s report, “Meetings focused on Kohberger’s interactions with graduate students with his behavior in and outside the classroom, with his behaviors about some criminal justice professors,” he said.
The school received nine separate complaints from faculty members, management employees and other students about ürü rude and despising behaviors for women, and wrote in a report of Idaho State Police Detective Sean Proser. On the other hand, the school organized a compulsory education class about behavioral expectations for all graduate students.
According to police reports, many of Kohberger’s other students and trainers in WSU were not suspected of their participation in the murders. However, at least another student realized that his behavior changed after the murders.
The student said that Kohberger frequently used his phone before the murders, but he stopped bringing his mobile phone to class after the murders. In addition, he looked more messy in the weeks after the murders, the student told the police and he thought it was strange that he never attended talks about the deaths of Moscow.
Finally, he called a police clue to inform him that he saw Kohberger with bloody spears just before the murders and that his hand seemed to have hit something.
___ Associated Press correspondent Coreyiams contributed from Detroit.



