In November 2022, the brutal killings of four University of Idaho students in the quiet college town of Moscow, Idaho, stunned the nation. Ethan Chapin, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen were stabbed to death in the middle of the night in their off-campus home. For weeks, the case remained unsolved, gripping true crime followers and sparking widespread fear. Then, in December 2022, police arrested a 28-year-old Ph.D. criminal justice student named Bryan Kohberger.
More than two years later, in July 2025, Kohberger confessed to the killings in a plea deal that spared him the death penalty, but the mystery surrounding the motive of the murders remains.
Who Is Bryan Kohberger?
Born in 1994, Kohberger was the youngest of three children and was raised in a working-class town near Pennsylvania’s Pocono Mountains. An awkward and withdrawn youth, he was academically successful but faced serious personal issues, including allegedly using substances in his late teens. Kohberger reportedly struggled in social situations and had limited success in relationships, with some classmates describing him as “creepy” toward women; some have suggested his feelings of isolation and rejection by women are similar to those who associate with incel-like ideology. His lawyers revealed in April 2025 that Kohberger had "recently" been diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder and previously stated that he has obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Despite these struggles, he earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree from DeSales University. In the summer of 2022, Kohberger moved across the country to begin a Ph.D. program at Washington State University in Pullman, less than 10 miles from Moscow, Idaho, the site of the gruesome murders.