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Idaho student murder suspect Bryan Kohberger was FIRED from his job as a teaching assistant just days before his arrest, after the professor called him out for “behavioral issues” and having a “sexist attitude toward women.”
- Bryan Kohberger, 28, was fired from his job as a teaching assistant due to “behavioral issues” and for having a “sexist attitude towards women.”
- The alleged quadruple killer reportedly received several warnings about his behavior before being taken to a disciplinary meeting with teachers.
- His attitude towards women was a key talking point and he was finally fired on December 19, a month after the quadruple murder.
Bryan Kohberger was fired from his job as a teaching assistant due to “behavior issues” just days before he was arrested for allegedly murdering four University of Idaho students.
Kohberger, 28, was facing disciplinary action at his job at Washington State University before he was finally let go on December 19, about a month after he allegedly killed four students. Eleven days later, he was arrested in Pennsylvania at his parents’ home.
He took office in August and was placed under investigation within a month for “behavioural issues” and for having a “sexist attitude towards women”. NewsNation saying.
The alleged quadruple killer reportedly received several warnings about his behavior and was brought into a meeting with a group of professors to discuss it, with his attitude towards women being a key topic of conversation.
Professors reportedly said he was “rude to women” and graded them differently from male students. He also reportedly had a “sexist attitude towards the women he interacted with at school.”
Kohberger has been accused of brutally murdering Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Maddie Mogen, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and Ethan Chapin, 20, at their off-campus home on November 13. The Pennsylvania resident faces four counts of first-degree murder in Idaho in their deaths
Bryan Kohberger, 28, was fired from his job as a teaching assistant due to “behavioral issues” and for having a “sexist attitude towards women.” He was released just days before he allegedly murdered four University of Idaho students on November 13.
Kohberger has been accused of brutally murdering Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Maddie Mogen, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and Ethan Chapin, 20, at their off-campus home on November 13. The Pennsylvania resident faces four counts of first-degree murder in Idaho in their deaths
Also during his time as a teaching assistant, Kohberger allegedly had multiple altercations with Professor John Snyder.
He got into an altercation with Snyder on September 23. Ten days later, Snyder brought Kohberger to a meeting to discuss Kohberger’s “professional behavior.”
Kohberger reportedly became more “feisty” and “belligerent” after the meeting and argued with the teachers.
Weeks later, Snyder emailed the alleged killer, citing that the teaching assistant had not “lived up to expectations,” according to NewsNation. On November 2, Kohberger and the professor met to discuss an “improvement plan.”
More than a month later – and after the murders had already occurred – Kohberger met with the faculty group to discuss their progress with the improvement plan.
Two days after the meeting, Snyder told the criminology grad student that he “hadn’t made any progress with respect to professionalism.”
On December 19, Kohberger was officially released from his teaching duties and was arrested in Pennsylvania on December 29.