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True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Two Cases Just Shifted — Brian Walshe’s Plea Flip & WSU Under Kohberger Fallout Fire

True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Tony Brueski

News, True Crime, News Commentary

4.2612 Ratings

🗓️ 21 November 2025

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Two major true-crime cases just took sharp, unexpected turns — one in the courtroom, one in the civil arena.

First, Brian Walshe blindsided the court by pleading guilty to disposing of Ana Walshe’s remains and misleading investigators — but still maintaining he didn’t kill her. It’s a move that redefines the entire murder trial and forces huge strategic shifts for both sides.

Then, across the country, Washington State University is facing legal heat. The Goncalves family has filed a civil claim arguing WSU ignored repeated warnings about Brian Kohberger before the Moscow murders. More than a dozen complaints. A professor calling him a future predator. Students saying they felt trapped and unsafe. The question now is simple: Does the law say the university should have done more?

On today’s episode of Hidden Killers, Tony Brueski sits down with legal analyst Eric Faddis to break down both cases:

• Why did Walshe plead guilty to these charges but not murder?
• Does this strengthen the prosecution’s theory — or hand the defense a new angle?
• What does the jury hear now, and how will it shape perception?
• And in the WSU civil case — what duty does a university owe?
• What evidence matters most?
• Does foreseeability apply when the crime occurred off-campus at another school?
• And is the real goal here discovery — forcing WSU’s internal files out into the light?

Two cases. Two seismic shifts. One conversation that lays out the stakes, the law, and the fallout.

#HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #BrianWalshe #BryanKohberger #WSU


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Bruske, Stacey Cole, and Todd Michaels.

0:08.8

Big developments happening as we are inching our way towards the Brian Walsh murder trial.

0:17.0

Big developments in terms of what Brian Walsh is saying he is responsible for and not responsible for

0:23.5

after now almost three years of saying I had nothing to do with any of it. We're going to break

0:28.8

all of this down in these new developments and these challenges. Right before jury selection,

0:34.6

Brian walked into court, raises his hand, and admits to two extremely serious

0:39.3

charges, misleading investigators and willfully conveying or disposing of Anna Walsh's remains.

0:45.5

The person he is also charged with murdering, his wife.

0:49.4

But he keeps his not guilty plea to murder.

0:54.0

It's an unusual split. It's big. It's strategic. And it raises a

0:57.6

ton of legal questions. We're going to break it all down right now. Eric Fattis, defense attorney and

1:02.8

former prosecutor is with us to help answer these questions. I want to break it down from both

1:07.5

angles, the prosecution's interpretation and what you as a defense attorney

1:12.0

would be thinking right now, if this were your client, let's just kind of start here and

1:18.3

lay out what it is we're actually looking at. What does this plea actually mean, Eric?

1:25.6

Sure. So, Tony, it means a few things.

1:28.3

One is that he will sustain convictions for those charges, misleading the police and also disposing

1:35.7

of the body.

1:37.3

And those charges are not unsurious.

1:39.3

I think misleading police carries approximately up to 10 years, the other charge up to three years.

1:44.8

So some serious prison time on the table already.

1:48.6

And then from there, the real question is going to be, how could these pleas affect the presentation of evidence at trial and affect what the jury hears, what they're allowed to consider, and what they're allowed to infer from them?

...

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