Moment Idaho ‘murderer’ pulled over by Indiana Police on December 15 – but cops couldn’t detain him
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BREAKING NEWS: Last month, Indiana State Police pulled over the Hyundai Elantra of Bryan Kohberger suspected of murders in Idaho for driving too close to a semi-truck while his father was sitting in the passenger seat
- Kohberger was arrested by the Indiana State Police on December 15, but the officers had no information that he was a suspect.
- He looked scared as an offer leaned over to the car asking for his license and registration.
- The stop occurred as Kohberger was traveling on I-70 outside of Indianapolis with his father.
- Ultimately, he was arrested on December 30 at his parents’ home in Pennsylvania for the November 13 massacre of four University of Idaho students.
Idaho quadruple murder suspect Bryan Kohberger looked terrified when Indiana State Police pulled him over last month as he sat next to his father in his now-infamous white Hyundai Elantra.
Police body camera footage captured the moment an officer approached Kohberger’s sedan Dec. 15 on I-70 outside Indianapolis.
The footage was released by Indiana State Police Monday night, hours after Kohberger agreed to be extradited from his home in Monroe County, Pennsylvania, to Idaho to face four counts of first-degree murder.
During the stop, Kohberger’s father also seemed concerned when the officer asked Kohberger for his license and registration.
State police told Fox59 that no information was available on the suspect in the Idaho murders at the time of the arrest.
Idaho police first requested information on a white Hyundai Elantra on December 7, a week before the Indiana traffic stop.
Kohberger was ultimately arrested on December 30 at his parents’ home in Pennsylvania for the November 13 massacre of four University of Idaho students.
Idaho quadruple murder suspect Bryan Kohberger was taken into custody by Indiana State Police on December 15, but police had no information that he was a suspect in the student murders.
The stop happened before 11 am. It was reportedly the second time he had been detained that day.
A Hancock County sheriff’s deputy had pulled him over earlier for the same tailgating problem.
Kohberger appeared in court Tuesday and waived extradition during a brief court hearing.
He expected to be transported back to the college town of Moscow, Idaho, where he is accused of murdering four college students in cold blood.
Kohberger denies the murders but does not fight extradition. He says that he’s looking forward to getting back to Idaho, where he can formally answer the charges.
The criminology doctoral student was arrested at his parents’ home in Pennsylvania on Friday. They were among those who appeared in court in Stroudsburg on Tuesday, but covered their faces with COVID masks, hats and hoods to evade the media.
Kohberger appeared in court Tuesday and waived extradition during a brief court hearing.