University of Idaho victims' families ask judge to permanently block crime scene images

LAS VEGAS — A seasoned Texas prosecutor, renowned for an unblemished record in murder convictions, has praised Idaho authorities for constructing what she describes as an undeniable case against Bryan Kohberger. Despite assertions from Kohberger’s defense team that their case was weak, the prosecutor argued that investigators had methodically assembled a “slam dunk” that would have led to a conviction, even without the guilty plea from the accused.

“Their work was exceptional — just look at the outcome,” remarked Kelly Siegler, a former prosecutor from Harris County, during a discussion at CrimeCon Las Vegas on Saturday. “He pled guilty, and they had a substantial amount of evidence, which they wisely kept under wraps until the right moment.”

Aside from a late-stage evidence leak to “Dateline,” which remains under investigation, Siegler noted that investigators effectively maintained discretion throughout the case.

“They excelled in crafting their case quietly and were poised to deliver a strong performance at trial,” she added.

Bryan Kohberger is seen at the Ada County Courthouse in Boise, Idaho, on July 23, 2025, during his sentencing for the fatal stabbings of four University of Idaho students nearly three years prior. (Kyle Green/Associated Press)

In July 2025, Kohberger entered a guilty plea and received a sentence of four consecutive life terms without the possibility of parole, along with an additional 10 years. His victims were Madison Mogen, 21; Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20.

More recently, a forensic scientist and criminologist hired by Kohberger’s defense team named Brent Turvey has raised concerns about the chain of custody of the prosecution’s main piece of evidence, a Ka-Bar knife sheath with Kohberger’s DNA on it recovered next to Mogen and Goncalves.

His concerns, however, were met with the first public statement on the case from Kohberger’s lawyers made outside a courtroom.

University of Idaho students Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, and two other housemates pose in the final photo shared by Goncalves on Instagram before four students were fatally stabbed in November 2022. (Kaylee Goncalves/Instagram)

“Mr. Turvey has not been released from his confidentiality agreement, and is now speaking about topics that are still confidential, many of which are outside of his areas of expertise,” reads a joint statement from his former attorneys Anne Taylor, Elisa Massoth and Bicka Barlow.

Despite Turvey’s findings, Kohberger took a plea deal.

Siegler, the host of Oxygen’s “Prosecuting Evil with Kelly Siegler,” also defended the deal’s lack of allocution, or an explanation from the defendant, saying the expectation was unrealistic and that killers typically just lie.

An evidence photo from the Moscow Police Department shows a KA-BAR knife sheath believed to have housed the knife Bryan Kohberger used to murder four University of Idaho students in November 2022. (Moscow Police Department)

Siegler has tried about 200 cases and landed a conviction in all 65 murder trials under her belt, according to her online bio.

At his sentencing, he sat emotionlessly, occasionally fidgeting in his chair or staring at the victims’ family members as they gave their impact statements.

Some critics were disappointed that the plea deal did not require him to allocute, or explain himself, but Siegler said that’s not unusual.

Prosecutor Bill Thompson speaks at the sentencing hearing of Bryan Kohberger at the Ada County Courthouse in Boise, Idaho, on July 23, 2025, for the stabbing deaths of four University of Idaho students nearly three years earlier. (Kyle Green/AP)

“The whole allocution that people think is gonna happen where they stand up and admit, admit they did it, first of all, we shouldn’t even call it a confession,” she told News Agency Saturday. “They don’t confess. They don’t even admit. They just give their version of a lie where they say enough to get their plea passed through.”

Latah County Prosecutor Bill Thompson had also suggested he didn’t ask for allocution because he believed Kohberger would have lied at the hearing.

“They don’t ever stand up and talk about why I did it and how I did, and I really did it or I’m sorry. That’s a TV thing,” Siegler said. “Doesn’t happen in the real courtroom.”

Bryan Kohberger standing in court with his attorney at Ada County Courthouse

Bryan Kohberger appears at the Ada County Courthouse in Boise, Idaho, on July 23, 2025, for his sentencing hearing for the stabbing deaths of four University of Idaho students nearly three years earlier. (Kyle Green/AP via Pool)

Still, she said, the explanation could have been more clearly communicated to the families, some of whom opposed the deal, which spared Kohberger from the potential death penalty and had no allocution requirement.

“They should have told people, they should’ve told the families, that is not gonna happen,” Siegler said. “Look at Bryan Kohberger, look at his eyes. You think that man’s gonna stand up and tell a courtroom in a world and his own family why he did it and how he did? That’s never gonna happen.”

Siegler also warned that public interest in unsolved and developing cases, including the months-long search for Nancy Guthrie in Arizona, can create pressure for commentators to fill information gaps with speculation.

“It’s really disgusting to see that happen,” she said.

Siegler said prosecutors are trained to focus on facts and admissible evidence.

“The first time you jump into the speculative realm as a prosecutor in a courtroom, you lose all your credibility,” she said. “So you can never do that.”

-->

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *