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The Idaho Murders | The Case Against Bryan Kohberger

The Idaho Murders | The Case Against Bryan Kohberger

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Get ready for a true-crime podcast that will leave you questioning everything with its relentless focus on the capture and prosecution of Bryan Kohbeger - the man accused of committing a quadruple homicide in Moscow, Idaho, involving the brutal murder of four innocent college students he allegedly didn't even know. We'll leave no stone unturned as we explore the dark depths of Kohbeger's mind, asking the most haunting question of all - what drove him to commit such a heinous act? With every episode of the Idaho Murders Podcast, we'll bring you riveting reporting, in-depth discussions, and the latest breaking updates on the case against Kohbeger. Join us as we seek answers and uncover the chilling truth that lurks beneath the surface of this baffling crime. Will justice be served? We'll keep you on the edge of your seat until the very end. Don't miss out on the most riveting true-crime storytelling you'll ever experience.True Crime Today Biografías y Memorias Crímenes Reales Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Kohberger’s Secret Stashes — What FBI Profilers Just Revealed | 2025 True Crime
    Jan 4 2026
    In this chilling Hidden Killers deep dive, we confront two disturbing revelations about Bryan Kohberger — the kind that point to hidden behavior far beyond what happened on King Road. Retired FBI Behavioral Analysis Program Chief Robin Dreeke joins Tony Brueski to break down the unsettling possibility that Kohberger maintained secret stashes of weapons, stolen items, and trophies — and that investigators may have only scratched the surface.

    First, we explore the “hidey hole” theory: a private cache where Kohberger may have stored the missing KA-BAR knife, clothing, stolen items, or other evidence he didn’t want to destroy. Dreeke draws direct parallels to BTK, Israel Keyes, and Robert Hansen — offenders who built entire systems of hidden drop sites to revisit, relive, and maintain control over their crimes. Kohberger’s shovel with tested soil, his repeated trips to remote parks, and a long pattern of break-ins and petty theft suggest this behavior may have been developing for years.

    But the story gets darker.

    We also examine the two mystery ID cards found in Kohberger’s possession — IDs belonging to women who were not his victims and who may not even know he ever had them. These weren’t discovered in plain sight. They were tucked away, hidden in a glove box inside a box. Dreeke explains why offenders sometimes keep items like this: not as accidents, but as trophies, leverage, fantasies, or souvenirs of earlier intrusions.

    Why would a man who meticulously cleaned his car miss two IDs? He probably didn’t. He simply didn’t believe they were important to the crime he was trying to erase — a psychological compartmentalization common among escalating offenders.

    Together, these findings raise chilling questions:
    • Did Kohberger have a cache?
    • How many items were hidden?
    • How many women were surveilled, targeted, or intruded upon?
    • And how much evidence — or truth — is still buried?

    This is the behavioral blueprint investigators fear the most: escalation, souvenirs, and secrets carefully tucked away.

    #BryanKohberger #HiddenKillers #Idaho4 #FBIProfiler #EvidenceStash #TrophyBehavior #TrueCrimePodcast #CriminalPsychology #KnifeCache #RobinDreeke


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    37 m
  • Victim Families' Gut-Wrenching Impact Statements: Kohberger's Courtroom Nightmare Exposed! | 2025 True Crime
    Jan 3 2026
    🔍 Feel the raw agony of the Idaho murder victims' families as they confront Bryan Kohberger in court with impact statements that shatter souls – in this emotional powerhouse from Hidden Killers 2025 Year in Review – a look back at the biggest cases of the year. During the July 23, 2025, Boise sentencing, where Kohberger copped his guilty plea for four life terms, the #Idaho4 kin unleashed unfiltered fury: Kaylee Goncalves' dad Steve slamming the "cowardly" stabber who stole futures, Xana Kernodle's mom Kristi detailing shattered dreams and endless therapy voids, and Ethan's sister Jazz sobbing over a brother's erased laughter. No dry eyes as they demanded he stare into the abyss he created – premeditated horror via Amazon knives and sheath DNA that no autism plea could erase.

    This Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski: True Crime Today deep dive captures the catharsis: Why these words weren't just closure, but weapons piercing his narcissistic shell, echoing FBI profiler warnings of zero empathy. Families' pleas for death row dodged, but the pain fueled yesterday's November 19 Goncalves WSU lawsuit, ripping into university lapses on Kohberger's creepy surveys and prowls. Restitution rages on too – $30K victim fund holdups and urn payback battles from the November 5 hearing, proving scars outlast sentences.

    True crime heart-breakers, this is visceral: Statements that humanize the lost and haunt the locked-away killer. Did Kohberger flinch, or feast on the spotlight? Your 2025 essential on grief's grip in the Idaho inferno, where words wound deeper than blades.

    #BryanKohberger #IdahoMurders #VictimImpact #FamilyStatements #TrueCrime #KohbergerSentencing #Idaho4 #HiddenKillers2025 #CrimeYearInReview #WSULawsuit #TrueCrimePodcast #CourtroomTears


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    34 m
  • Did Kohberger Stalk Others — And Did Investigators Miss It? | 2025 True Crime
    Jan 3 2026
    In today’s explosive Hidden Killers episode, we confront two of the most unsettling questions still hanging over the Bryan Kohberger case: Was he stalking other women long before the murders — and did investigators miss critical evidence that could reveal the full scope of his behavior?

    Tony Brueski brings together new reporting, behavioral analysis, and expert insight to examine the disturbing possibility that the Moscow murders were not Kohberger’s first intrusion — and may not have been his last attempt at gaining control over women he watched, followed, or targeted.

    Unsealed documents now suggest Kohberger may have entered the King Road home prior to the murders, explaining his precision during the attack. But that revelation unlocks deeper implications when paired with a chilling 2021 break-in in Pullman, where a masked intruder armed with a knife slipped into a home full of sleeping sorority members. Nobody was harmed. But the parallels — the geography, the weapon, the behavioral signature — are impossible to ignore.

    Was he testing boundaries? Testing fear? Testing himself?

    Then retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer joins Tony to analyze whether investigators — despite their massive effort — may have missed key evidence in the chaotic crime scene aftermath. A three-person DNA mixture under a victim’s nails, inconsistencies in injury documentation, and the inherent difficulty of processing an ultra-violent, multi-victim scene leave open the question of whether critical clues slipped through the cracks.

    We examine how crime scene pressure, overwhelming public scrutiny, and the singular focus on Kohberger could have narrowed the investigative lens too soon. Did they catch the right man? Yes. But did they catch every part of what he did? That’s a different question.

    This episode ties it all together — the stalking, the intrusions, the behavioral pattern, and the forensic blind spots — painting a picture of a suspect whose trail may stretch further than the public ever realized.


    #BryanKohberger #IdahoMurders #HiddenKillers #CriminalPsychology #StalkingBehavior #ForensicAnalysis #JenniferCoffindaffer #TonyBrueski #TrueCrimePodcast #KohbergerInvestigation


    Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video?

    Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@hiddenkillerspod
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    36 m
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So I like the story line and how they have organized but I had to stop listening due to the amount of commercials. 3 to 7 minutes of the same repetitive ads ruined the whole podcast for me. I listen to podcasts while I’m working and doing school work. A little less monetizing would probably put this podcast further.

The amount of commercials on this make it very hard to listen to

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What is that woman talking about? Biased and not informed. Don't recommend. Waste of time.

Avoid Those Losers

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I am very interested in hearing information about this case, but this podcast does not deliver anything but tobs if advertising.

More advertising than content!

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the police and college. has anyone thought maybe this was a grand plan against the very ones that didn't pick him for the job he tried out for? just saying and also the professor shouldnt have said she would actually study him for her career....that's a conflict of interest and prob not the best ethical thing. this is why it's about the killer when this stuff happens because people play into them it should be about the 4. he should suffer.

my opinion

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