What Happened When Every Claim in the Kohberger Book Was Checked Against Idaho Prosecutors
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 • 612 Ratings
🗓️ 11 May 2026
⏱️ 62 minutes
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Summary
Criminologist Brent Turvey is the primary source behind "Broken Plea," the new book on the Idaho murders case. He has now been publicly disavowed by the defense team that hired him. Attorneys Ann Taylor, Elisa Massoth, and Bicka Barlow stated they are "appalled" by his media appearances and that he is violating his confidentiality agreement. They specified he was hired solely for crime scene analysis and is speaking on topics outside his scope. The book's own author told NewsNation there is "no smoking gun" and "no secret evidence." This Hidden Killers Week in Review combines two episodes examining the book's claims against the evidentiary record and the psychological portrait of Bryan Kohberger emerging from newly surfaced jail writings.
Tony Brueski systematically checked every major allegation. The chain of custody claim that Turvey characterizes as "fabricated"? Moscow's police chief responded that the department uses electronic barcodes, not handwritten logs. The Othram DNA laboratory allegation? Forensic professionals confirmed it as a standard step in genetic genealogy investigation, not evidence of a cover-up. The second-attacker theory? Directly contradicted by Kohberger's own guilty plea as a sole actor — entered with no incentive to shield an accomplice and with a trial date weeks away. The prosecution's case, the defense's internal conflict over its own expert, and Kohberger's decision to plead guilty despite having every argument in this book available to him all point to the same unresolved question.
The episodes also examine Kohberger's never-before-published jail letters. He wrote to his dog about alleged telepathic communication. He described "triumphantly ascending" and experiencing "clarity and serenity" from custody. He wrote his sister a letter so clinically detached it resembles academic correspondence. Across all writings, there is no reference to Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, or Ethan Chapin. Psychotherapist Shavaun Scott analyzes these writings alongside documented jail behaviors — obsessive handwashing until his skin bled, prolonged showers, and the consistent pattern of watching his own case coverage but switching channels whenever his family appeared.
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#BryanKohberger #IdahoMurders #BrokenPlea #KayleeGoncalves #MadisonMogen #XanaKernodle #EthanChapin #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #CriminalPsychology
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is the big breakdown. |
| 0:02.2 | A long look back at some of the biggest stories we're covering for you at the Hidden Killers podcast and True Crime today. |
| 0:11.0 | This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Bruske and Robin Greene. |
| 0:18.5 | I've been wanting to talk about this element of this new Koberger book for a while. |
| 0:23.8 | The new book is out, by the way. |
| 0:25.6 | You may have heard of it. |
| 0:26.5 | I'm not even going to say the title of it because I think it's a waste of time, |
| 0:29.0 | and I think it's not a book worth reading, |
| 0:30.4 | because a lot of it is focusing on debunked DNA claims and crime scene forensics |
| 0:36.1 | that are easily disprovable. |
| 0:37.5 | It very much does feel like a cash grab, in my opinion. |
| 0:40.9 | But buried inside it is something far more unsettling than almost nobody is talking about. |
| 0:48.9 | Brian Koeberger's own words from jail, three letters written from the Lado County Jail in October of 2023 addressed to |
| 0:58.0 | his dog, his sister, and his family published for the first time. And we're going to read each and |
| 1:04.7 | every letter here on the program today and break it down. Because when you read them alongside |
| 1:10.0 | what his mother told the FBI, |
| 1:12.0 | the night of his arrest, and what two inmates independently observed about his behavior, |
| 1:15.8 | the psychological portrait is unlike anything we've seen in this case. Psychotherapist, |
| 1:20.2 | Chauvin Scott, author of The Minds of Mass Killers and her memoir, Nightbird, which is available |
| 1:25.9 | right now, wherever books are sold, is joining us to help break this down. |
| 1:30.5 | When I first saw these letters, Chavon, it was like, |
| 1:33.8 | ooh, we got to talk to Chavon about this. |
... |
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