The Mercury News Weekend

Police: Slaying suspect's DNA found at crime scene

- By Rebecca Boone and Gene Johnson

BOISE, IDAHO >> The DNA of the man accused of killing four University of Idaho students was found on a knife sheath recovered at the crime scene and cellphone data shows that in the months before the attack, he was in the area of the victims' home multiple times, an investigat­or said in court documents unsealed Thursday.

The affidavit written by Brett Payne, a police corporal in Moscow, Idaho, was made public minutes before Bryan Kohberger, a 28-year-old criminal justice doctoral student at nearby Washington State University, was due to appear in court after being extradited Wednesday from Pennsylvan­ia, where his parents live and where he was arrested. He is charged with four counts of first-degree murder and felony burglary in the Nov. 13 attack.

According to the newly unsealed court documents, traces of DNA from a lone male later determined to be Kohberger were found on the button of a leather knife sheath found in the rental home where the victims were killed. A knife with a U.S. Marine Corps insignia on it was also found at the scene, though there's no record of Kohberger having served in the military.

A woman who also lived at the house told police that she awoke to the sound of crying during the predawn attack and opened her bedroom door to find a masked man dressed in black, according to the court filing.

She said she stood in “frozen shock” as the man, whom she didn't recognize, walked past her and toward a glass sliding door, the police investigat­or wrote. She then went back into her room and locked the door.

Surveillan­ce footage captured near the home showed a white sedan — later identified as a Hyundai Elantra — drove by the home three times in the early morning hours of Nov. 13, returning a fourth time at about 4:04 a.m. The car was next spotted on surveillan­ce cameras leaving King Road 16 minutes later “at a high rate of speed,” Payne wrote. The same car was later spotted on a different camera headed toward Pullman.

Meanwhile, location data from Kohberger's cellphone showed he had traveled to the area of the victims' residence at least a dozen times between late June and the night of the killings, authoritie­s said. Investigat­ors haven't disclosed a possible motive or said whether they think Kohberger knew any of the victims — Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin.

Kohberger was arrested at his parents' home in eastern Pennsylvan­ia last week and agreed to be extradited to Idaho. His attorney in Pennsylvan­ia, Monroe County chief public defender Jason LaBar, said Kohberger was eager to be exonerated.”

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