Copilot:
Kernodle and Mogen both worked at a restaurant in Moscow Idaho; what kind of restaurant is it, does it have a liquor license?
Yes, Louise — both Madison Mogen and Xana Kernodle worked at a restaurant called Mad Greek in downtown Moscow, Idaho.
🍽️ What kind of restaurant is Mad Greek?
It’s a Greek and Mediterranean-style eatery known for dishes like lamb gyros, beef souvlaki, and spanakopita.
Despite specializing in meat-heavy cuisine, it also offers vegan options — including a pizza that Bryan Kohberger reportedly ordered during his visits3.
The vibe is casual and cozy, popular with students and locals alike.
🍷 Liquor license?
Yes, Mad Greek does have a liquor license. It serves beer, wine, and cocktails — typical for a sit-down restaurant in Idaho.
The presence of alcohol was never a focal point in the investigation, but it’s part of the standard dining experience there.
If you’re curious, I can dig into how Kohberger’s visits to the restaurant factored into the case — or how Mogen and Goncalves’ work there may have intersected with his behavior. It’s one of the more unsettling threads in the story.
Tell me about Kohbeger's visits; were either of the girls working there when they occured?
That’s one of the more haunting threads in the case, Louise — and while we don’t have a definitive answer, here’s what’s known:
🍕 Kohberger’s visits to Mad Greek
He reportedly visited the restaurant at least twice before the murders, ordering vegan pizza each time.
He was described as very particular about his food — asking staff to confirm it hadn’t touched animal products.
These visits stood out not because of any suspicious behavior, but because of his strict dietary requests.
👩🍳 Were Madison or Xana working during those visits?
Both Madison Mogen and Xana Kernodle worked at Mad Greek as servers.
However, it’s unclear whether either of them waited on Kohberger or interacted with him directly.
The restaurant’s owner later disputed some media reports, saying claims about Kohberger’s visits were “completely fabricated” — though law enforcement did interview staff and collect surveillance footage.
📱 Online connections?
Kohberger allegedly followed Madison, Xana, and Kaylee Goncalves on Instagram from a now-deleted account.
He also reportedly messaged one of them repeatedly without getting a response.
So while there’s no confirmed interaction between Kohberger and the girls at the restaurant, the circumstantial links — his visits, his online activity, and their shared space — have fueled speculation about whether he was stalking them.
Want to explore how investigators pieced together his movements before the murders? There’s a chilling timeline.
As someone with autism, Kohberger would not drink alcohol. Is that correct?
That’s a thoughtful question, Louise — and the answer isn’t entirely straightforward.
🧠 Autism and alcohol use:
Being on the autism spectrum doesn’t automatically mean someone abstains from alcohol.
In fact, some autistic individuals drink socially or occasionally, just like neurotypical people.
However, many do choose to avoid alcohol — often because of:
Sensory sensitivities: Alcohol can intensify discomfort with taste, smell, or bodily sensations.
Medication conflicts: Some take medications that react poorly with alcohol.
Routine and control: Alcohol’s effects on mood and behavior can be unsettling for those who prefer predictability.
🍷 In Kohberger’s case:
There's no public indication that he drank alcohol — and his veganism and rigid routines suggest he was highly controlled in his habits.
But autism alone doesn’t tell us definitively whether he drank. It just helps paint a fuller picture of his personality and choices.
If you're wondering whether his behavioral traits (including abstaining from alcohol) shaped how he approached the crime or how others perceived him, that’s an angle worth exploring too. Would you like to go there?
Had the girls been drinking on the night of the murders?
Yes, Louise — Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen had been drinking the night of the murders, though it was part of a typical night out for college students.
🍻 Timeline of their evening:
On November 12, 2022, Kaylee and Madison went to Corner Club, a popular bar in downtown Moscow, Idaho.
They were seen on surveillance footage and reportedly spent a few hours there.
After leaving the bar, they stopped by a food truck around 1:40 a.m., where they were filmed chatting and ordering food.
They then returned home by approximately 1:56 a.m., according to police.
🕵️♀️ Was alcohol a factor in the crime?
There’s no indication that their drinking played any role in the murders.
Police never suggested impairment affected their ability to respond or escape.
It was simply part of a normal Saturday night for two college seniors.
Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin had attended a fraternity party earlier that evening, and while it’s likely they also consumed alcohol, the details haven’t been publicly confirmed.
If you’re wondering how investigators reconstructed the timeline or how surveillance footage helped track Kohberger’s movements, I can walk you through that next. It’s eerie how precise the digital trail turned out to be.
Goncalves was no longer a resident of the home, but was visiting for the week-end. How could Kohberger have known this?
That’s one of the most chilling questions in the case, Louise — and the truth is, we don’t know for sure how Bryan Kohberger knew Kaylee Goncalves would be there that weekend.
🕵️♀️ Here’s what’s known:
Kaylee had moved out of the King Road house weeks earlier and was living with her parents in Rathdrum, Idaho.
She returned to Moscow just for the weekend to show off her new car and spend time with her best friend, Madison Mogen.
Kohberger had allegedly been stalking the house for months, according to Kaylee’s sister Alivea and police interviews.
Kaylee had told friends she felt like she was being watched, and even saw a dark figure near the house while walking her dog.
📱 Digital breadcrumbs?
Kohberger reportedly followed Kaylee and Madison on Instagram from a now-deleted account.
He may have seen Kaylee post about her visit or noticed her car outside the house.
Surveillance footage and cellphone data later showed Kohberger returning to the crime scene hours after the murders, suggesting a disturbing level of fixation.
🚨 But here’s the unsettling part:
Investigators still haven’t found any direct communication between Kohberger and the victims.
There’s no confirmed motive or explanation for how he tracked Kaylee’s movements so precisely.
It’s possible he was watching the house closely enough to notice her arrival — or that her presence was a tragic coincidence in a plan he’d already set in motion. Either way, it adds another layer of horror to an already devastating crime.
Would you like to explore how investigators used digital evidence to track his movements before and after the murders? It’s eerie how much they uncovered.
Goncalve's dog was at the scene?
Yes, Louise — Kaylee Goncalves’ dog, Murphy, was indeed at the scene of the murders, and his presence has drawn a lot of attention.
🐾 What happened to Murphy?
Murphy was found unharmed inside the King Road home when police arrived on November 13, 2022.
He was discovered in a room where no murders occurred, and investigators confirmed he did not tamper with the crime scene.
The dog was later released to a “responsible party” — which turned out to be Kaylee’s ex-boyfriend, Jack DuCoeur, who had shared custody of Murphy with her3.
🕵️♀️ Did Murphy sense anything?
Friends reported that Murphy had acted strangely in the weeks leading up to the murders, running into the woods and refusing to come when called — behavior that was unusual for him.
On one occasion, Kaylee saw a dark figure staring at her from the tree line while taking Murphy out to pee.
Around 4 a.m. on the night of the murders, Murphy’s barking reportedly woke up neighbors, though it’s unclear whether he encountered the killer.
Murphy’s survival and behavior have added a haunting layer to the case — especially since Kaylee had expressed fears of being watched in the weeks before her death.
Would you like to explore how Murphy’s presence may have influenced the timeline or what investigators learned from the scene?
Kohberger did not stalk the house the day before the events, but arrived at 2 in the morning; is that correct?
Not quite, Louise — the timeline is a bit more unsettling than that.
📱 Digital evidence shows Kohberger had stalked the King Road house multiple times before the murders — not just the night of. In fact:
His cellphone pinged near the house at least 23 times between July and November 2022, mostly late at night.
On November 12, the day before the murders, his phone was turned off or in airplane mode for several hours — including during the time of the attack — which investigators believe was intentional.
Surveillance footage captured his white Hyundai Elantra arriving near the house around 3:28 a.m. on November 13, and leaving at 4:20 a.m., just after the murders occurred.
🚪 He entered through the sliding glass door on the second floor and left the same way, passing one of the surviving roommates who saw him in a mask.
So while he may not have been physically near the house the day before, the digital trail shows months of surveillance, and his arrival in the early morning hours was part of a carefully planned attack.
Want to explore how investigators used cellphone data and surveillance to build the case? It’s a masterclass in digital forensics.
Could anyone else have been stalking the house; did the police check for that??
That’s a sharp question, Louise — and yes, investigators did explore the possibility that someone other than Bryan Kohberger might have been stalking the King Road house.
🕵️♀️ Here’s what the police looked into:
They received multiple tips about strange behavior near the house in the weeks before the murders.
One roommate, Bethany Funke, told police that Kaylee Goncalves saw a man staring at her from the woods while walking her dog — she was so unsettled she called her roommates to ask when they’d be home.
On November 4, nine days before the murders, the roommates came home to find the front door open and loose on its hinges. They armed themselves with golf clubs, fearing an intruder.
A nearby neighbor reported seeing a nervous-looking man in her yard in August or September 2022 — she later told police she was almost certain it was Kohberger.
Police also investigated a Walmart employee’s tip that a white college-aged male had asked for a black ski mask a few weeks before the murders.
🔬 What about other suspects?
Kohberger’s defense pointed to unidentified male DNA found on a glove and a handrail at the scene, suggesting it could belong to someone else.
However, prosecutors argued that Kohberger’s DNA on the knife sheath, cellphone data, and surveillance footage were far more compelling.
The judge ruled that the presence of other DNA didn’t undermine probable cause — but it could be used to raise reasonable doubt at trial.
So while police did check for other stalkers or suspects, no credible alternative emerged. Kohberger’s digital trail and physical evidence ultimately led to his arrest and conviction.
Want to dig into how forensic genealogy helped crack the case? It’s cutting-edge stuff.
But phone use was checked only on Kohberger?
Not at all, Louise — investigators cast a much wider net than just Bryan Kohberger’s phone.
📱 Digital forensics went beyond Kohberger:
Police obtained warrants for the victims’ phones, laptops, and social media accounts — including Instagram, Tinder, Gmail, Reddit, and more.
They used PIN codes from family members to unlock three of the four phones and extract full data.
Investigators also pulled financial records from DoorDash, Elan Financial Services, and the Idaho Department of Labor to trace transactions and employment info.
Surveillance footage and 13,000+ frames of video were analyzed from nearby businesses and residences.
Authorities even served warrants for eBay user IDs linked to the purchase of the knife sheath found at the scene.
🔍 What about other suspects?
Police looked into other individuals seen near the house, including a man who harassed one of the victims at a bar and another who bought a ski mask at Walmart weeks earlier.
They also investigated unidentified male DNA found on a glove and handrail — but ultimately determined it didn’t undermine the case against Kohberger.
So while Kohberger’s phone was a key piece of the puzzle, it was far from the only digital trail investigators followed. Want to dive into how they used iCloud data or social media to reconstruct the victims’ final hours? It’s a fascinating layer of the case.
Was there a useful kitchen at the house, or did the inhabitants eat out?
Yes, Louise — the King Road house had a fully functional kitchen, and the residents did use it.
🍳 Kitchen details:
The house featured a shared kitchen and utility room, located centrally on the second floor.
It was equipped with standard appliances and cooking tools — enough for the six roommates to prepare meals regularly.
Investigators found food remnants, cooking supplies, and dishes during their forensic sweep, confirming it was actively used.
🍽️ Did they eat out?
Yes, but mostly on weekends or social outings. On the night of the murders:
Kaylee and Madison grabbed food from a downtown food truck after leaving the Corner Club bar.
Xana and Ethan attended a fraternity party, where food and drinks were likely served.
So while they did enjoy eating out occasionally, the kitchen was very much part of their daily lives — especially for casual meals and shared routines.
Want to explore how the layout of the house may have influenced Kohberger’s movements or how the roommates used different parts of the home? It’s surprisingly relevant.
How were the inhabitants housed earlier: two per floor?
Great question, Louise — the layout of the King Road house was a bit unconventional, but here's how the residents were generally arranged:
🏠 Floor-by-floor breakdown:
Third Floor (Top Level):
Kaylee Goncalves had previously lived here before moving out. Her room was on this floor, and she was visiting for the weekend when the murders occurred.
Madison Mogen also had a room on this floor.
This level had two bedrooms and was considered the most private.
Second Floor (Middle Level):
Xana Kernodle lived here, and her room was adjacent to the kitchen and sliding glass door — which is believed to be the point of entry for the killer.
Ethan Chapin, Xana’s boyfriend, was staying with her that night.
This floor had the shared kitchen and common areas, making it a central hub.
First Floor (Bottom Level):
Bethany Funke and Dylan Mortensen, the two surviving roommates, had rooms here.
Their rooms were separated from the main living areas, which may explain why they weren’t immediately aware of the attack.
So yes — it was roughly two people per floor, though Ethan was just visiting. The layout played a significant role in how the crime unfolded and how some residents survived.
Would you like a visual breakdown of the house’s floor plan or how the killer moved through it? It’s eerie but illuminating.
Do we know which of the girlt Kohberger messaged repeatedly?
That detail remains unconfirmed, Louise — investigators have never publicly identified which of the three female victims Bryan Kohberger messaged repeatedly on Instagram.
📱 What’s known:
A source close to the case told People magazine that Kohberger sent a series of messages to one of the victims in late October 2022 — about two weeks before the murders.
The messages were described as non-threatening, mostly just “Hey, how are you?” — but he sent them multiple times after receiving no reply.
The victim may not have seen the messages at all, since they likely went into her message requests folder, which doesn’t trigger notifications.
Kohberger’s now-deleted Instagram account reportedly followed Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, and Xana Kernodle, but there was no public interaction on their profiles.
🔍 Recent developments:
Despite early reports, investigators now say they found no direct social media connection between Kohberger and any of the victims.
They’ve also stated that no motive or personal link has been established, even after extensive digital forensics.
So while it’s widely believed he messaged one of the girls — and may have been fixated on her — the identity of that victim has never been officially confirmed. If you'd like, I can walk you through how investigators traced his online activity and what they found (or didn’t).
Would someone say "Hey, how are you" to someone he had never interacted with?
It’s surprisingly common, Louise — especially in the world of social media. That kind of message is often the digital version of a stranger waving hello across a crowded room: casual, non-committal, and a way to start a conversation without seeming aggressive.
👀 Why someone might do that:
It’s a low-effort, low-risk opener — sort of like casting a net to see if there’s any interest.
In Kohberger’s case, it could suggest he was trying to initiate contact in a way that wouldn’t immediately raise alarm.
Sending a message like that repeatedly without a reply, though, hints at obsessive behavior or poor social awareness — something often flagged in stalking cases.
💡 Context matters: If the recipient doesn't know the sender and there's no mutual connection, “Hey, how are you?” can feel intrusive or confusing. But to the sender, it might just seem harmless — especially if they’re socially awkward or interpreting interactions differently, which might apply to someone like Kohberger given his ASD diagnosis.
It’s the pattern and the intent behind the repetition that raise red flags. If you're curious, I can walk you through how that kind of behavior fits into stalking psychology — or how law enforcement assesses messages like that when building a case.
Did Kohberger have a doctor; one would think someone with autism might be on meds...
That’s a very reasonable assumption, Louise — and it turns out Bryan Kohberger was evaluated by a neuropsychologist as part of his legal defense.
🧠 Medical evaluation and diagnosis:
Kohberger underwent a comprehensive neurological assessment by Dr. Rachel Orr, a neuropsychologist based in New Hampshire.
She confirmed that he exhibits all core diagnostic features of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) — including rigid thinking, difficulty interpreting social cues, and limited emotional insight.
His attorneys used this diagnosis to argue against the death penalty, saying it created an “unacceptable risk” of wrongful execution due to how jurors might misinterpret his behavior.
💊 Was he on medication?
There’s no public record confirming that Kohberger was prescribed or taking medication for autism.
That’s not unusual — many autistic individuals aren’t medicated specifically for ASD, since it’s a neurodevelopmental condition rather than a psychiatric illness.
However, if someone has co-occurring conditions like anxiety, OCD, or depression (which Kohberger reportedly showed signs of), they might be prescribed meds to manage those symptoms.
His defense team also noted that he frequently wore gloves and cleaned obsessively — behaviors they said were linked to his autism and not necessarily evidence of guilt.
If you’d like, I can walk you through how autism is typically treated medically or how courts weigh neuropsychological evaluations in criminal cases. It’s a fascinating intersection of law and mental health.
Did the house the girls lived in often have visitors. Did they throw parties?
Yes, Louise — the King Road house was known as a social hotspot among University of Idaho students.
🎉 Frequent visitors and parties:
The house had a reputation as a “party house”, with regular gatherings that drew friends and classmates.
Police bodycam footage from September 1, 2022 — just two months before the murders — shows officers responding to a noise complaint at the house. At the time, guests were present but none of the residents were home.
In interviews and social media posts, friends described the house as a place where the rommates often hosted get-togethers, especially on weekends.
TikTok videos and Instagram posts show the girls dancing, cooking, and hanging out with friends — including Kaylee’s dog, Murphy — in a lively, communal atmosphere.
🏠 Why it mattered:
Some experts speculated that the house’s visibility and social activity may have made it a target — though police never confirmed this as a motive.
The layout of the home, with multiple entry points and three floors, also made it easier for visitors to come and go without disturbing others.
If you’d like, I can walk you through how the house’s design may have influenced the killer’s movements — or how police used party-related footage to reconstruct the timeline. It’s a chilling but important piece of the puzzle.
How could there be a party with none of the residents home?
That detail definitely raised eyebrows, Louise — but it turns out it wasn’t all that unusual for the King Road house.
🎉 Here’s how it happened:
On September 1, 2022, police responded to a noise complaint at the house.
When they arrived, none of the residents were home — but the house was still full of guests partying.
One of the guests called Madison Mogen, who apologized to the officers over the phone.
The police noted that the house was known as a “party house”, and gatherings often happened even when the tenants weren’t present.
👀 Why would that be allowed?
The residents were all part of Greek life, and the house was located right behind Greek Row — making it a popular hangout spot.
It’s likely that friends or sorority sisters felt comfortable using the space, especially if they had permission or knew the layout.
The house had multiple entry points, including exterior doors on all three floors, which made access easy.
So while it might seem strange, it was part of the social culture around the University of Idaho — and it may have contributed to the house’s visibility, which some believe played a role in the tragedy.
Want to explore how the house’s layout or social scene may have influenced Kohberger’s fixation? It’s a chilling angle.
What do you mean by Greek Life?
Greek Life refers to the system of fraternities and sororities found at many colleges and universities — especially in the U.S. — and it plays a big role in student culture, social networks, and extracurricular activities.
🏛️ Quick Breakdown:
Fraternities: Male-only social organizations, often labeled with Greek letters (e.g., Alpha Tau Omega).
Sororities: Female-only counterparts, also using Greek names (e.g., Delta Gamma).
Members live in designated houses, participate in group events, and often have shared values or philanthropic goals.
Joining is called “going Greek”, and the process usually involves recruitment or rush week, followed by initiation.
🎉 What happens in Greek Life?
Social events: Parties, mixers, formals.
Community service: Fundraisers, volunteer work.
Leadership opportunities: Members run their own chapters with elected positions.
Strong alumni connections: Often lifelong networks for job hunting and mentorship.
💬 In the Idaho case context: The residents of the King Road house were active in Greek Life — attending sorority and fraternity functions and hosting social events. Their involvement may have made their home more visible to outsiders and increased foot traffic around the neighborhood.
If you'd like, I can explain how Greek Life influences campus safety, or how it factored into other criminal investigations — there’s plenty of crossover.
Kohberger was older and more academically advanced than the students in that house. Could he have had a professional or research interest in what these people were doing?
That’s a compelling angle to consider, Louise — and it’s one that investigators and criminologists have wrestled with since Kohberger’s arrest.
🎓 Academic background:
Kohberger was a Ph.D. student in criminology at Washington State University, just 15 minutes from Moscow, Idaho.
His studies focused on criminal decision-making, forensic psychology, and crime scene analysis.
He had previously earned a master’s degree in criminal justice from DeSales University, where he worked on research involving empathy and emotion in criminals.
🧪 Research interests that raise eyebrows:
In 2022, Kohberger posted a survey on Reddit asking criminals to describe their thoughts and feelings before, during, and after committing crimes — including how they chose victims and planned their actions.
The survey was part of a study on criminal behavior and decision-making, and it’s now viewed as eerily similar to the methods used in the Idaho murders.
🏠 Connection to the King Road house?
There’s no evidence that Kohberger had a professional or academic link to the victims or their activities.
However, investigators believe he specifically targeted the house, though they still don’t know why or who he was focused on.
Some speculate that the social dynamics of the victims — outgoing, popular, deeply connected to Greek life — may have fascinated or frustrated Kohberger, especially given his own reported struggles with isolation and social rejection.
🧠 Was it research or obsession?
Prosecutors noted that Kohberger had written a detailed paper on crime scene processing and had the “knowledge skillset” to plan and cover up a crime.
But they stopped short of saying the murders were part of a research experiment — instead, they described his actions as premeditated and deeply personal, not academic.
So while his academic background may have informed how he committed the crime, there’s no indication it was motivated by research. It’s more likely that his studies gave him the tools — not the reason.
Would you like to explore how his criminology training shaped the way he planned and concealed the murders? It’s chilling how methodical he was.
Wouldn't he have known about phone records?
Absolutely, Louise — and that’s part of what makes this case so eerie.
📚 Kohberger’s academic background:
He was a Ph.D. student in criminology, specializing in criminal behavior and forensic psychology.
He had written papers on crime scene processing and studied how offenders make decisions — including how they plan and conceal crimes.
He even conducted a survey asking criminals to describe their thoughts before, during, and after committing crimes, including how they avoided detection.
📱 So yes — he would’ve known about phone records:
He likely understood that cell tower pings, GPS data, and app usage could be used to track movements.
He turned off his phone during the murders — from 2:54 a.m. to 4:48 a.m. — which investigators interpreted as an attempt to avoid detection.
But he didn’t realize that his phone had pinged near the victims’ house 23 times in the months prior, mostly late at night.
He also returned to the crime scene around 9 a.m. the next morning with his phone on — another digital breadcrumb.
🔍 What went wrong?
Despite his education, Kohberger underestimated the power of digital forensics.
Investigators used cellphone data, surveillance footage, and DNA to build a timeline that ultimately led to his arrest.
His criminology training may have made him more methodical, but it didn’t make him invisible.
If you’d like, I can walk you through how investigators used phone records, surveillance, and forensic genealogy to crack the case. It’s a masterclass in modern detective work.
Were any of the girls in financial difficulty?
There’s no public evidence, Louise, that Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, or Xana Kernodle were experiencing financial hardship before the murders — but there are a few clues worth noting.
💼 Work and income:
Kaylee and Madison both worked at Mad Greek, a popular restaurant in Moscow, Idaho. It’s not clear how many hours they worked, but it suggests they were financially independent to some degree.
Xana Kernodle also held a job, and her mother, Cara Northington, later sought financial help to attend the trial — which may hint at limited resources within the family.
💰 GoFundMe campaigns:
After the murders, Kaylee’s family raised over $85,000 to cover legal and travel expenses for the trial. When Kohberger accepted a plea deal, her father announced they would return the funds, saying they didn’t want to mislead donors.
Xana’s mother had a separate fundraiser to help her relocate for the trial, with friends noting she hadn’t asked for anything herself until prompted.
Madison’s family also launched a campaign to cover costs related to attending court proceedings.
So while the girls themselves weren’t publicly described as struggling financially, their families did face significant financial strain in the aftermath — especially with the unexpected burden of attending a high-profile trial hundreds of miles away.
Would you like to explore how the university or community supported the families, or how the house’s donation to the school factored into the financial picture?
Did the girls do drugs?
There’s no credible evidence that Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, or Xana Kernodle were involved in drug use, Louise — and investigators have never suggested it played any role in the case.
🧪 What’s been confirmed:
The girls were known for being social and outgoing, often attending parties and hosting friends at their King Road house.
Police responded to noise complaints at the house, but there were no drug-related citations or arrests.
Despite online rumors and speculation — including YouTube videos and Reddit threads suggesting the house was a “trap house” — law enforcement found no indication of drug activity during their forensic sweep.
The surviving roommates and friends described the victims as responsible students who worked part-time jobs and were focused on school and social life.
🔍 What investigators looked into:
They conducted extensive digital forensics, including searches of phones, laptops, and social media accounts.
No drug-related communications or purchases were uncovered.
The toxicology reports have not been publicly released, but there’s been no suggestion that drugs were a factor in the murders.
So while the house was lively and social, there’s no basis for claims that the girls were using or distributing drugs. If you’re curious, I can walk you through how investigators ruled out that angle or how rumors like this can affect public perception in high-profile cases.
Were the girls suspected of prostitution?
No, Louise — there has never been any credible allegation or evidence suggesting that Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, or Xana Kernodle were involved in prostitution.
🕵️♀️ What investigators found:
The girls were known for being social, hardworking students who held part-time jobs and were active in campus life.
Police conducted extensive digital forensics — including searches of phones, laptops, and social media — and found no indication of sex work or trafficking.
Despite online rumors and conspiracy theories, law enforcement has never linked the victims to any criminal activity, including prostitution.
📚 Public perception vs. reality:
The King Road house was known as a party house, which unfortunately led to speculation — but that’s not unusual for college students.
Investigators and prosecutors have consistently focused on Bryan Kohberger’s actions, not the victims’ lifestyles.
The families have strongly defended the girls’ reputations, and no part of the case has ever involved accusations of sex work.
If you’re curious, I can walk you through how rumors like this spread in high-profile cases — or how investigators separate fact from speculation when building a case.
Girls working in restaurants might get hit on all the time...
Definitely, Louise — that’s one of the unfortunate realities of working in the service industry, especially for young women.
🍽️ Why restaurant workers often get unwanted attention:
Customer entitlement: Some patrons treat servers like they’re part of the experience, not people, and push boundaries — especially if alcohol is involved.
Forced friendliness: Hospitality workers are expected to be warm and engaging, which can be misinterpreted as flirtation.
Repeat visitors: Regulars sometimes mistake familiarity for permission to initiate contact — or worse, pursue the staff.
Power imbalance: Servers often feel pressured to tolerate uncomfortable behavior to avoid losing tips or getting in trouble with management.
👩🍳 In Mad Greek’s case:
Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves were well-known and popular in the Moscow community. If Kohberger did interact with them there, he may have used the restaurant setting as a low-risk way to observe or approach them.
Staff are trained to defuse awkward or inappropriate encounters, but persistent attention — especially masked as politeness — can slip under the radar.
It’s unsettling to think about how something as routine as waiting tables can place someone in a vulnerable spot. Want to unpack how stalking behavior can exploit everyday interactions, especially in public-facing roles? It’s a chilling dynamic worth understanding.
Tell me about the area of criminal decision-making, Krohberger's area of study. Are there major findings, bench-mark concepts?
Absolutely, Louise — criminal decision-making is a fascinating and complex field, and it was central to Bryan Kohberger’s academic focus as a criminology Ph.D. student. Let’s break it down into the major theories, benchmark concepts, and key findings that shape this area of study.
🧠 Core Theories in Criminal Decision-Making:
Rational Choice Theory (RCT):
Assumes offenders make calculated decisions by weighing risks vs. rewards.
Crime is seen as a purposeful act — the result of a cost-benefit analysis.
Benchmark concepts: utility, bounded rationality, and hedonism (seeking pleasure, avoiding pain).
Routine Activity Theory:
Crime occurs when three elements converge: a motivated offender, a suitable target, and lack of capable guardianship.
Often used to explain property crimes and situational vulnerabilities.
Deterrence Theory:
Focuses on how the certainty, severity, and swiftness of punishment influence criminal choices.
Research shows certainty of punishment is more effective than severity.
Dual-Process Models:
Suggest decision-making involves both impulsive/emotional and deliberative/logical systems.
Useful for understanding crimes committed under stress, intoxication, or emotional arousal.
🧪 Key Findings and Insights:
Emotion plays a major role: Offenders often act under emotional pressure, not just logic. Fear, anger, and thrill-seeking can override rational calculations.
Planning varies widely: Some crimes are meticulously planned; others are spontaneous. Planning tends to increase with crime complexity and offender experience.
Risk perception is subjective: Offenders assess risk based on personal experience, peer influence, and situational cues — not necessarily on actual likelihood of getting caught.
Social and psychological factors matter: Traits like low self-control, impulsivity, and fearlessness are linked to criminal behavior.
Environmental cues influence decisions: Lighting, surveillance, neighborhood activity, and even store layout can affect whether a crime is attempted.
📚 Why Kohberger’s interest matters: His studies likely gave him insight into how offenders think, how crimes are planned, and how to avoid detection — which prosecutors argued he used to carry out the Idaho murders. He even conducted a survey asking criminals to describe their thoughts before, during, and after committing crimes — eerily similar to the methods used in the attack.
If you’d like, I can walk you through how these theories apply to Kohberger’s alleged behavior or how law enforcement uses them to predict and prevent crime.
Did Kohberger have a flashlight, were the lights turned on, Essentially, was he expecting to murder on the top floor people who were asleep?
That’s a chilling line of inquiry, Louise — and while some details remain murky, here’s what investigators and newly unsealed documents suggest:
🔦 Did Kohberger use a flashlight or turn on lights?
Police recovered a silver flashlight from Kohberger’s parents’ home during his arrest.
However, there’s no direct evidence confirming he used it during the murders.
Officers noted that the back patio door was ajar, and footprints in the snow led away from the house — suggesting he entered and exited in near-total darkness.
The surviving roommates didn’t report seeing lights on, and one described the figure she saw as wearing black clothing and a ski mask, moving silently through the house.
🛏️ Were the victims on the top floor asleep?
Yes — Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen were found in bed together on the third floor, likely asleep when attacked.
Their injuries suggest they were killed under a blanket, with no defensive wounds on Kaylee and only a few on Madison.
The brutality of the attack — especially the facial injuries — indicates it was swift and targeted, likely while they were unconscious.
🧠 Was he expecting them to be asleep?
Almost certainly. The attack occurred around 4 a.m., a time when most people would be deeply asleep.
His phone was turned off during the murders, and he had stalked the house repeatedly in the months prior — suggesting he knew the layout and routines.
The fact that he entered through the second-floor sliding door, bypassing the first-floor roommates, and went straight to the top floor implies intentional targeting.
So while we don’t know if he used a flashlight, the evidence points to a stealthy, premeditated attack in near-darkness — with the expectation that his victims would be asleep and vulnerable.
Want to explore how the house’s layout or Kohberger’s movements shaped the timeline? It’s disturbingly precise.
So he just wanted to kill them, and had no interest in taunting them...
There’s no clear evidence that Kohberger intended to taunt or torture the victims — in fact, quite the opposite. The details suggest that the attack was disturbingly silent, swift, and methodical.
🕵️♂️ No Signs of Sadistic Behavior
Victims were likely asleep or caught off guard, with no indications of prolonged suffering or psychological torment.
There were no messages left behind, no communication before or after, no signs of post-mortem mutilation or display — all things that might hint at a desire to taunt or instill fear.
🔪 Focused and Isolated Violence
Each floor was targeted quickly — the third floor first, then the second — skipping the ground-floor roommates entirely.
Surveillance footage and phone data show he spent mere minutes inside, consistent with a tight, chilling execution rather than a drawn-out spectacle.
🧠 Motivation: Control, Not Cruelty?
Criminologists have speculated that his actions seem driven by obsession, control, or possibly resentment — not by a desire to provoke or engage with the victims.
What makes this so haunting is the clinical detachment: no personal connection, no expression — just calculated violence. If you're curious, we can look into the psychology behind targeted serial killings or compare known patterns from similar cases. It’s grim territory, but fascinating in its cold precision.
Did Kohberger ever show interest in serial killers in his studies?
Yes, Louise — Bryan Kohberger showed notable academic interest in serial killers during his criminology studies, and it’s raised eyebrows in hindsight.
📚 Coursework & Professors
Kohberger studied under Dr. Katherine Ramsland at DeSales University, a renowned forensic psychologist who co-authored books with BTK killer Dennis Rader.
Ramsland taught him in courses like “Dangerous Minds: The Psychology of Anti-Social Behavior”, which focused heavily on serial killers.
She later admitted she was “completely fooled” by him and wondered if her curriculum may have unintentionally inspired him.
🧠 Fascination with Elliot Rodger
Kohberger reportedly showed particular interest in Elliot Rodger, the 2014 Isla Vista killer linked to the incel movement.
He took a class that analyzed Rodger’s motives and behavior, and classmates noted Kohberger seemed unbothered by Rodger’s violent manifesto.
A Facebook user named “Pappa Rodger” posted eerily accurate details about the Idaho murders before they were public — some believe it was Kohberger using Rodger’s name as an alias.
📖 Serial Killer Literature
Kohberger read and studied books like Confession of a Serial Killer and The Mind of a Murderer, which delve into the psychology and decision-making of notorious killers2.
So yes — his academic path was steeped in the study of serial killers, and some experts now wonder whether it was curiosity, obsession, or identification that drove his interest.
Want to dig into how criminology programs handle students with dark fascinations, or how Ramsland’s work with BTK shaped her teaching? It’s a chilling intersection of education and pathology.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliot_Rodger