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True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

The Confidentiality Agreement Kohberger's Expert Allegedly Violated

True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Tony Brueski

True Crime, News Commentary, News

4.2612 Ratings

🗓️ 8 May 2026

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Bryan Kohberger pleaded guilty on July 2, 2025, to the stabbing deaths of four University of Idaho students. He received four consecutive life sentences with no possibility of parole and waived his right to appeal. The legal proceedings are concluded.

A book titled "Broken Plea" by Christopher Whitcomb has introduced claims from former defense expert Brent Turvey regarding alleged chain of custody irregularities with the Ka-Bar knife sheath recovered at the crime scene — the prosecution's primary physical evidence linking Kohberger through DNA found under the snap. The evidence bag was reportedly documented inconsistently, with entries on a label appearing in similar handwriting with the same pen across multiple dates spanning November 2022.

Kohberger's defense team, led by attorney Anne Taylor, issued their first public statement outside court proceedings since his December 2022 arrest. The statement accuses Turvey of violating a confidentiality agreement that they say has not been rescinded, and of speaking outside his areas of expertise on material that remains confidential. Turvey has characterized the statement as a deflection, stating he disclosed nothing confidential and alleging that Taylor's office had been investigated over a separate leak.

The chain of custody allegation was not included in Turvey's filed expert report. He claims the discovery came after his filing deadline. Retired NYPD Inspector Paul Mauro has characterized the claim as a procedural attack rather than a substantive evidentiary challenge. Whitcomb has acknowledged there is no wrongful conviction claim and had no investigative role in the case.

Former felony prosecutor and defense attorney Eric Faddis provides a procedural analysis of the confidentiality dispute, the evidentiary weight of post-plea forensic claims, and the ethical framework governing expert conduct in concluded criminal cases.

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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

#BryanKohberger #IdahoMurders #BrokenPlea #BrentTurvey #AnneTaylor #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #EricFaddis #ChainOfCustody #LegalAnalysis

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Just because they seem normal doesn't mean they are.

0:04.4

Welcome to Hidden Killers with Tony Bruske.

0:09.6

This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Bruske and Robin Drink.

0:16.3

Let's got another fine human being.

0:18.2

Brian Coburger confessed, waived appeal.

0:20.3

He's done. But a new. Brian Coburger confessed, waived appeal. He's done.

0:21.3

But a new book and a fired up defense expert are trying to sell doubt about a closed case

0:29.0

and his own former defense team just went public to tear the expert apart.

0:33.3

Eric Fattis, defense attorney, is with myself and Robin Drake to help break down.

0:37.9

Who's credible?

0:41.5

Who's not in whether any of this actually matters?

0:46.7

Me and Robin tried to do the book over last weekend.

0:50.1

And honestly, I got like two hours.

0:50.7

How far did you get?

0:52.6

I got two hours in before I said I'm done. About two or three.

0:53.5

And actually it's the only, it's the first audible book I actually ever return in my life to I did too. I didn't know you could return audible books until you told me that. But luckily I did it because you can only do it if you have a, if you used a credit to get it. And that's my God. I got my credit back. And yeah, first time I ever did it. I just couldn't stomach it. It just way off.

1:11.7

I did too. It was like, this is bullshit. But anyway, that's our opinion. But let's talk about what, because there is some, you know, there's some smoke coming here out of it. And I think it's important to address it. So it just doesn't, you know, continue to spread and turn into a wildfire. Brent Turvey signed a confidentiality agreement when he was hired by Koeberger's defense. He's now

1:31.3

talked about... you know, continue to spread and turn into a wildfire. Brent Turvey signed a confidentiality agreement when he was hired by Koeberger's defense.

1:31.1

He's now talking to reporters and collaborated on the book and has been making claims

1:36.6

allegedly about evidence he reviewed under that agreement.

1:39.9

Ann Taylor's team has said that he was never released from the confidentiality agreement.

1:45.3

Turvey says everything he shared was already public.

...

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