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Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Prosecutors Say No Front Row for the Kohbergers

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

True Crime Today

True Crime, News, News Commentary

3 • 791 Ratings

🗓️ 2 April 2025

⏱️ 22 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Prosecutors in Idaho aren’t pulling any punches—Bryan Kohberger’s family won’t be getting VIP seats at his murder trial. In a sharp court filing, Deputy Latah County Prosecutor Ashley Jennings made it clear: if the defendant’s relatives are potentially going to testify, they’ll need to sit outside the courtroom until that moment comes. No exceptions.

Jennings told the judge that while the state may call members of the Kohberger family to testify, their potential witness status means they can’t sit in on other people’s testimony beforehand. This is standard trial procedure—witnesses are usually excluded until after they’ve taken the stand, so their own words aren’t influenced by what others say. It’s courtroom 101.

But Kohberger’s defense doesn’t see it that way. His attorneys submitted a request asking that his family be given the same priority seating as the victims’ families. They argued that excluding his relatives would violate his Sixth Amendment right to a public trial. The state wasn’t having it.

Jennings responded that the Sixth Amendment guarantees the defendant a public trial—not the right to pick the audience. And when it comes to courtroom rights, the Idaho Constitution specifically gives the families of homicide victims the ability to be present at trial. Kohberger’s family? They don’t get that same legal status. Jennings pointed out that the law just doesn’t give the accused’s family the same courtroom privileges as the victims’ next of kin. It’s not personal—it’s statutory.

To complicate matters further, there’s some history here. Back in December 2022, Bryan Kohberger and his father were pulled over twice while driving across Indiana during their trip home to Pennsylvania, not long after the murders. That kind of detail might come up in court—potentially putting his father on the witness list, and by extension, on the bench outside the courtroom.

Meanwhile, Kohberger’s sister, Amanda Kohberger, has already been seen making court appearances of her own, including being spotted exiting a Pennsylvania courthouse early in the investigation. Whether she ends up on the witness list remains to be seen, but the prosecution isn’t ruling anything out.

In another filing twist, the defense requested the judge ban anyone in the courtroom from wearing clothing that features the victims’ faces. They didn’t argue against the victims’ families attending, but they took aim at what they wear—specifically calling out what they said were prejudicial displays, possibly directed at the Goncalves family.

Kohberger, now 30, was a Ph.D. student in criminology at Washington State University when prosecutors say he drove across state lines to Moscow, Idaho. There, according to investigators, he entered an off-campus home around 4 a.m. and stabbed four University of Idaho students to death: Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin. Two of the victims were allegedly asleep or otherwise incapacitated during the initial attack, making it unlikely they had any chance to react.

Investigators found a Ka-Bar knife sheath under Madison Mogen’s body. DNA allegedly matching Kohberger’s was recovered from the snap of the sheath. Prosecutors also say his phone data and surveillance footage put him near the crime scene.

They claim he was even captured on his own selfie camera around 10:31 a.m.—just six hours after the murders took place. If true, that timeline could be a linchpin in the prosecution’s case.

Kohberger has pleaded not guilty to four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary. His trial is scheduled to begin on August 11 in Boise, after a judge granted a change of venue. If convicted, he faces the possibility of the death penalty.

#BryanKohberger #IdahoMurders #TrueCrimePodcast #CourtroomDrama

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is murder in the morning with Tony Bruske and Stacey Cole.

0:06.5

Oh, hey, Brian Koeberger's parents and family are not going to get VIP seating.

0:13.7

It appears at his upcoming trial.

0:16.9

Prosecutors in Idaho aren't pulling any punches in this.

0:20.5

His family won't be there in the front row of the trial in a sharp court filing.

0:28.0

Deputy LaDaugh County prosecutor Ashley Jennings made it clear.

0:32.5

If the defendant's relatives are potentially going to testify, they'll need to sit outside the courtroom until that moment comes.

0:39.2

No exceptions.

0:40.8

That is how that works.

0:41.8

You can't be in there if you're going to be testifying either way.

0:45.4

If you're just going to be there for support?

0:47.5

Okay.

0:48.6

Jennings told the judge that while the state may call members of the Coboberger family to testify, their potential witness status

0:55.9

means they can't sit in on others' testimony beforehand. This is a standard trial procedure.

1:03.2

Witnesses are usually excluded until after they've taken the stand, so their own words aren't

1:08.3

influenced by what others say. It is courtroom 101.

1:12.2

But Koeberger's defense doesn't see it that way.

1:14.6

His attorney submitted a request asking that his family be given the same priority seating as the victim's families.

1:21.7

Yeah, because that sounds about right.

1:24.7

Look, I feel horrible for the Koeberger family. I think they had a bad egg,

1:31.2

and it seems like the rest of them kind of have their shit together for the most part,

1:36.4

but, you know, you got something broken there in Brian. And I think they were probably, I don't say, just as shocked. I would guess if that's your

...

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