Aidaho Killer Prosecutor shares theory why Brian Kohberger spared Dylan Mortenssen after seeing him

The leading prosecutor in the case of murder of the University of Idaho Quadrilla shares his theory of freezing why killer Brian Kohberger spared a potential fifth victim. Earlier this month, Kohberger found guilty of the killings of college students Kayly Gonkalvs, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodel and Ethan Chapin in the early hours of November 13, 2022 at a student house outside the campus in Moscow, Idaho. Kohberger’s 30 -year -old received four consecutive life sentences for the killings on July 23. He is expected to lie in prison. Following the sentence, the Moscow Police Department has scored hundreds of documents related to the case, including a statement by police officer Mitch Nunes, who wrote how roommate Dylan Mortensen has survived that he sees the assailant of his roommates. Nunes said Mortensen “peered” from his bedroom on the second floor, “and watched a man described as approximately 6 feet high, thin construction, with a black ski mask leaves the inner courtyard area on the second floor.” (Mortensen shared the same floor as Kernodle.) In an interview with the Aidaho state man, published on Wednesday, July 30, the prosecutor of the Latach County Bill Bill Bill said that it was very likely that the attacker would see Mortensen, although he did not try to attack her. Disturbing from the unsealed Idaho killing documents after Brian Kohberger gets a life in the prison “from what Dylan described, it’s hard for me to imagine that the killer did not see Dylan,” he said. Thompson theorizes: “At that moment, he was probably in the house, probably longer than he had planned, and killed more people than he planned. … He would not surprise us that the killer was scared at that moment and decided that they had to leave without knowing whether the order was already called.” Brian Kohberger appeared in the court of Ada County for his hearing on July 23, 2025 in Boyz, Idaho. Kyle Green-Pul/Getty Images Mortensen gave an emotional statement about the victim’s influence during Kochberger’s sentence in Boas, Idaho, on July 23. “What happened tonight changed everything,” she said through tears, according to CBS News. “Because of him, four beautiful, real, compassionate people were taken from this world for no reason.” Dylan Mortensen is comforting after talking at the hearing of Brian Kohberger’s sentence at the Ada County County on July 23, 2025 in Boyz, Idaho. Kyle Green-Pull/Getty Images Mortensen continued: “What he crashed me in places I didn’t know he could break. I had to find out who I was. I had to have experience in college and start establishing my future. I was forced to learn how to experience the unimaginable.” Mortensen continued to describe the ongoing psychological effects of that fateful night, revealing that she is terrified of being alone and experiencing regular panic attacks. Details of the killings of Idaho College appear as an order elevators: What Brian Kohberger did “I can’t breathe, I can’t think, I can’t stop shaking. It’s far beyond anxiety. It’s my body to be able to do it again, it’s never for him, it’s not the message that is done. She. Mortensen described Kohberger as a “hollow vessel, something less than the human, a body without empathy, without remorse.” She added, “He chose destruction. He chose evil. He feels nothing. He tried to take everything from me: my friends, my safety, my identity, my future.” A second surviving roommate, Bethani Funk, also wrote a statement that was read by a friend. Funk described his guilt that he did not realize what had happened earlier. “I still carry so much regret and guilt that I don’t know what happened and I don’t call [911] Immediately, even though I understand that it would not change anything, even if the paramedics were right at the door, “she said, according to CBS News and E! News.

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