Idaho ‘killer’ Bryan Kohberger stalked murder victims’ home TWELVE TIMES
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Idaho ‘killer’ Bryan Kohberger stalked victims’ home at least TWELVE TIMES prior to murders: Cell phone data reveals he turned off his phone for two hours during the quadruple murder, returning to area two more times late the same day.
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Idaho alleged murderer Bryan Kohberger staked out his victim’s home 12 times before brutally murdering her, a police affidavit reveals.
Authorities released the probable cause affidavit before the 28-year-old’s hearing in Moscow, Idaho, later today.
It reveals how Kohberger turned off his phone on the night of the murders in an attempt to cover his tracks before the murders, turning it off before getting too close to the property.
Twisted Kohberger even returned to the scene of the crime at 9 a.m. on November 13, just hours after he allegedly committed the quadruple murders.
Documents say the criminal justice grad stalked the property in the late afternoon and early morning on all but one occasion.
Kohberger stalked the home of his four victims twelve times before killing them.
Meticulous Kohberger turned off his phone the night of the murders in an attempt to cover his tracks after approaching the property on King Road.
Authorities have not released the exact dates he toured the three-story property, but confirmed that he was detained in August just two minutes after leaving the area covered by the cell phone tower closest to the home.
A Latah County deputy sheriff pulled him over on Aug. 21 at 11:37 p.m. as part of a traffic stop, in which he provided his number.
During the stop, which was recorded on the officer’s body camera, Kohberger was driving his white Hyundai Elantra.
Due to the series of traffic stops, officers were able to link both the car and the phone number to Kohberger, and search each time his device pinged the tower closest to the property.
On the night of the murders, Kohberger’s phone rang from a cell tower near his apartment in Pullman, Washington.
He is then seen leaving the area of his residence at 2:47 a.m. and traveling south through Pullman, which police have confirmed aligns with the movements of his white Hyundai caught on camera.
Your phone then stops reporting to the network, which is confirmed by FBI experts to be consistent with the phone being turned off, in airplane mode, or in an area with no phone coverage.
Court documents show that his phone is not active again until 4:48 a.m., in the southbound lane of Highway 95, just south of Moscow.
Kohberger then travels towards Genesse, Uniontown and finally returns to Pullman between 4:50 a.m. and 5:26 a.m.
Cell phone data then rings as he returns to his property, which is again caught on camera as the Elantra drives northbound on Stadium Drive at 5:27 a.m.