I wonder though, I come from the Philippines & this is not a common theme. Robbery, drug crimes are. But not so much homicides for no reason. Usually money is the incentive because it’s a third world country. But most, not all, are able to get by even without much & be somewhat happy. There is a strong sense of community. Which brings me to.. Why is this more popular in U.S.? The creepy looking early to mid 20’s guy who was bullied in school turned murderer. Is it really mental health or is it the lack of community & togetherness which breed loneliness & spiral down to psychopathy? Mental health sometimes I feel is used as a crutch because it’s the easiest to blame.
Someone was asking him questions, you say? Hmm... I thought he just had really, REALLY bad ADD, periodically causing him to fall into a daydream state... 😁
“Dying in vain” is not the correct phrase. The phrase is used for deaths occurring during a worthy mission or cause. “The soldiers did not die in vain.”
NO, not the whole country. I asked 3 people yesterday what they thought and they didn’t know even my own family and some of my coworkers know nothing about it.
Nope, I know what you mean, but they died a senseless death, and nothing good will come out of it whatever. That's a hard thing to take in, but there you are.
@@fitnessbabe7958 well good then they won't have trouble finding jurors when and if it goes to trial! Because that's a fear some have being it's been so publicized! I too asked some friends and fam what their thoughts were on a suspect finally being identified, only half knew what I was speaking of .. so I think it's safer to say "half the country" is following this story... 🤷🏼♀️
I had a sub teacher in junior high and high school who turned out to have murdered his 2 wives. Others thought him odd but I never would have thought him a murderer. I learned that I can not judge people.
I also do not judge people but have a very strong intuition and trust my gut. I will Pickup on odd traits of another without even speaking to them. Body language, affect or lack of, and of course eyes. Not a psychic at all but I am what they call an EMPATH so I feel very very strongly before my brain can even rationalize what I’m seeing.
@@I.can_feel_it.in.the_air that's what he is talking about because some people are good at it.. Our mind is always observing others, it's part of survival psychology. Being judgey about others is different.
I know the feeling: in 2005 I watched the TV Broadcast the Headlines: “The BTK Killer has been captured”. I saw the picture of a person in an orange jumpsuit, and the name Dennis Rader.. I remembered a person who I used to call my friend back in 1966 -1968, who I was in the Air Force with me. At first I though that this must be another person. I did not recognize the picture because the last time I saw Dennis Radar was in July 1968, some 37 years previously. I did some research and sure enough, the person who had been a friend of mine in the late 1960’s ended up as a Serial Killer years later!
I am sure you are more comfortable with this framing, but it isn't as though he became a different person or that murdering many people just happened to him. He was a violent psychopath, even when you knew him, and just really good at hiding it
@@rachelk4805 perhaps since he was a narcissistic personality, he wasn't hiding at all. Albeit, he lacked empathy and thusly those contributing characteristics that manifest emphatic displays of emotion on someone baseline, such as guilt or remorse?
So the behavior and hygiene of a pHd student working as a teacher's assistant changed during finals week...OK, just in case you've never been a pHd student, this is not odd behavior. Anyone who is TAing serious classes and doesn't look disheveled at some point during finals week is doing some serious drugs, or a very poor job. These murders are horrible, but this guy should be presumed innocent until proven guilty, and all we have heard so far is that DNA at the scene matches someone who may or may not be related to Kohberger, and that there was a white Elantra at the house. DNA is good, sure, but there's a lot of ways for that to happen. Was it a pool of his blood? Or was it a shirt he donated to Goodwill and one of these young folks bought it because they liked the look? I am seeing a lot of talking heads on news shows basically saying this guy is a serial killer because he didn't know these people and he was studying criminal behavior, but that presumes he did it. Maybe he did, but for crying out loud, lets act like we have a real justice system, please.
First of all, the DNA they found came directly from the knife sheath left behind the night of the murders, not something randomly found in the house. Secondly, this student's observations of his T.A. was never meant to be some open and shut case proving guilt of the crime. It's a drop of information, an observation, a witness to Kohberger over a period of time. That's all. His testimony about the fake trial between the students and Kohberger is certainly something to consider combined with the rest of the evidence. Never a stand alone decision maker, yet not something to entirely dismiss either. It's a puzzle to put together with some evidence weighing much more heavily than others. This is some of the lighter information to come forward. I'm not sure it will make it through the speculation part that his lawyers will want thrown out of the records. I'm not a lawyer, so don't know. But it seems quite relevant to Kohberger's state of mind at that time and that there may have been a trigger event. Doesn't explain why he allegedly picked these people though. There is likely more to come...
The police revealed a lot more evidence on the PC affidavit that came out after your comment. It doesn't seem like there is reasonable doubt at this point.
I was lab partner with a cute redhaired fellow in college. That summer, he kidnapped a major businessman's wife and held her for ransom. He and his pals got caught, and she's OK. You never know what people can do, or what their motivation might be.
Looks can be deceiving too. Some say Bryan looks attractive in some pics, I myself don't think so. He looks awkward in most of it. Again, these students classmates of his ,did not paint an out of the ordinary picture of him being suspicious, except the tiredness but could be from cramming for his final exams and all the sleepless anxious nights he'll be caught anytime after the killings.
I think coldburger ...was planning to catch one of those girls alone.........and do his Ultimate serial killer fantasy...but he ran into an unexpected encounter with multiple people...and he went bonkers and took out 4 people and he left........
@@georgegil2299 Nah. That was a party house with 6 roommates. The place was full of people 24x7. K!ller knew very well he'd never get 1 girl alone in there. He knew he was going to have to knife more than one person to escape and that's probably exactly what he wanted. K!ller wanted to make his own Halloween slasher movie.
That is why you buy a gun. You learn how to use it like a pro. And you take it with you where ever you go. And if you cannot take it someplace....you do not go.
It sounds like he began the year taking his TA position very seriously, and really wanted to contribute to the level of education the students were receiving, by setting high standards. But later, became discouraged after being reprimanded by his superiors. He may have been adonished to lighten up a bit. After all... higher marks make the program look more successful. He may have felt offended or undermined. Thus going to the extreme of giving undeserved high marks. This may have caused him to feel discouraged and disappointed in what he perceived to be a lower standard of education. Perhaps.
I must say that this interview was done very well. Straight to the fact. And my heart goes out to each and every one of the kids at the school as well because this has had to have taken a toll on everyone of them
It's crazy to think how many people this has affected besides the victims and their circle. I hope everyone is able to get mental health support if they need it, especially the younger adults, like this student.
What the heck are you talking about? You can't hear the interviewers questions. There are long silent pauses, and the answers lack context without hearing the question. Especially at the halfway point where he talks about the day that the class argued with Bryan about grades and the time he started seeing a change in him.
1:22 i guess the students will be a bit happy he is arrested so their papers aren't graded as harshly. 3:42 when students are turning in papers of stick men or whatever and they're getting 100s you know something's going on 4:00! new teacher grades even tougher 🤦♂
I find him annoying and effeminate. He needs to learn how to not speak like a snotty teenage girl if he expects to be taken serious when he grows up. He's in a criminal justice program, not law school.
Yes but now he can’t help the case by being a witness since he already talked to the media. The chief has been asking people that knows him or has any little information about him, to not talk to the media.
This guy seems very intelligent - in fact he's definitely the sharpest person I've yet heard talk about Kohberger! Far more satisfying observations than any of the "professional" law enforcement people.
What a low bar you have for intelligence: “Totally” “like” a harsh grader, so if we were “gonna be like an attorney.” This student is not particularly bright, thinks he is, and dramatizes every interaction as “proof” of his TA’s guilt: over-articulates his terms to affect intelligence. He and his classmates “thought the TA was weird” and from there they made their conclusion of guilt. They really will be “like great lawyers.” Give me a break. Who knows if Kohberger did it or not? These students’ hasty generalizations and post hoc claims such as “He was more distracted after the murders because he graded more leniently” are not a sign of anything. The murders occurred on November 13. The WSU term ended December 13. During that time, students, like this one, are submitting a pile of assignments, many last-minute and late, and Kohberger is finishing his major assignments for a PhD program while trying to grade hundreds of assignments (he had three classes to grade). Also, he probably took heat for grading his students too harshly, so he figured “whatever,” slapped a grade on, and focused on his own studies. If this is so compelling, then why not ask this “expert” how his other TA’s looked? Did any others seem more stressed at the time? Should we conclude they are guilty too? What about other students or faculty? Was anyone less invested in grading or completing work? Was anyone on campus more stressed? Perhaps they are guilty too? Give me a break. This bs does nothing to help the process. If this kid was as intelligent as you claim, I would think, as a CJ major, he would know what constitutes evidence and what does not. I’m sure the observations were “satisfying” for you; happily your satiety is not a litmus test in a criminal proceeding.
100% Speculation. Most TAs are absolutely awkward and nerdy. All students complain about their grades and how the TA grades harshly. This is not a behavior change. Most TA’s are very busy and don’t have allot of time between meeting students, grading, and their own studies.
He was probably quiet bc he couldn't wait to hear people's reactions to that. Of course he would be all ears. That would titalate a killer. And the apartment people under him said he never slept and was up late at night making noise.
He graded hard to play GOD he loves having the power to play on people’s emotions. So he was good to some and not others. If someone was grading him as a murderer thankfully he would get an F
I mean, maybe, but he might have just been a hard grader because he was a hard grader. Not *everything* a narcissistic person does is done to feed their narcissism.
@@joelwillis2043 Yeah, it was unnecessary to call @whiskyagogo a nerd. It's rather ostensive why he resents TAs. Evidently he's a lousy college student, well he lack proper grammar to comprehend the appropriate usage of an apostrophe. Consequently negating the notion of him being a "nerd", as you so colloquially stated, and reinforcing the likelihood of TAs seemingly appearance as tormentors for righteously correcting the excessive grammatical errors undoubtedly therein present in the work.
Really interesting to hear this intelligent student's observations... to notice that Kohberger became more preoccupied and then to describe it as extreme preoccupation after the time of the murders is significant i.e. his behavior noticeably changed after the murders - which would of course not be unexpected. Nothing that is all that tangible in terms of pointing to his guilt, but certainly fits in the puzzle... Another student who actually took classes with Kohberger said something similar, i.e. he was very chatty in the immediate aftermath, but then grew very quiet when their class would talk about the murders... Can you imagine what his reaction must have been when the police announced in early December that they were looking for the occupant of a white Hyundai Elantra?! Bryan probably needed to change into his brown trousers before he left the house after hearing that....
I'm baffled about his "motive" for committing these murders. I don't know that the police have figured it out yet, but the whole situation seems so strange.
@@HighlanderNorth1 well. 73years here, my life observation would be: any Killer and/or murderer (s) reason is inhuman, unreasonable, ill, ZERO, no brainer,for a big."duh", what are you thinking?. Just saying. The reasons they give are all upside down. All for one, one for all Them.!
@@HighlanderNorth1 IMO, his motivation was to prove he is smarter and better than the other predators; and to observe how well his plans and actions brought about his desired results. I'm sure he was hoping for an A+.
@@a.racetiffany2966 I'll look past your insult, and I'll point out that people usually require actual reasons for doing the things they do. That includes murdering other people. If it was as simple as you make it out to be, then we would have no need whatsoever for terms like "motive". But without knowing the reasons why a crime was committed, it's much more difficult to find the suspects!
This guy said that the students were complaining about BK's grading standards and the professor "put him on trial" can you imagine 75 people criticizing you? Could this have been the thing that tipped BK over mentally?
Interesting idea. Seems plausible if he was misguidedly hoping to build camaraderie with the students by grading tough to initiate a certain type of interaction from them in the first place. Like he wanted to be looked up to and approached individually to request grade changes but then the professor put them in equal ground where students were critical of him all the sudden, "half of 150 students in the class" (75 people), that's a lot of criticism if you can't take any in the first place.
Again innocent until proven guilty. So grabbing a student who doesnt know him.... To throw him down. Man media is doing a great job at bad journalism as always. Until i hear solid facts this all is just blabber. Blah blah blah i don't know him im a student.
Of all the people that havr come out testifying that they knew bryan ---- not one has been a friend or girlfriend that he hung out with outside of school. All have been classmates in Pennsylvania or Washington, that spoke to him in class but never met outside of class, plus one jogging buddy. Outside of that, there were friends from highschool, who often said they lost touch with him after junior year.. Highschool was 10 years ago. Has Bryan NEVER had any contact with anyone or any friends within the last 5-9 years?
Thats a big stretch. Just because the only people willing to run their mouths in front of a camera, give up their privacy and join the insane media circus are distant acquaintances does not=omg Bryan has no friends!!!! People close to him are likely keeping their mouths shut (by advice of attorneys) so they don't jeopardize his case. Not everyone is an attention wh*re or willing to risk having their lives destroyed by an internet mob for just being friends with the guy. The lack of critical thinking skills I see in these comments is truly astounding.
So the class basically embarrassed him and belittled him in front of the whole class. Probably made fun of for half his life. Real fkn nice. Killer or not doesn't sound like something you do to someone.
must be a really crappy university based on this guys speaking skills. "like, like ,like, ya you know " overuse of the word "like" only means you dont know the English language very well.
Wow! You not only have an education from this guy, but also on-the-job experience learning from an alleged killer! You deserve a refund on your college bill!
The PD specifically asked to hear about people's whose demeanor changed. Brian's obviously did. Why did nobody leave a tip about him? Is it because there's too many humans and too many of them are weird, that to speculate would mean everyone's a killer? 🤔
Most things, observations seem subtle in the moment they are happening. He probably speculated Kohberger's change in grading was because he was angry after the student confrontation or fake trial they had. And he was probably right. It's not until after finding out the truth that retrospectively things become clearer. Hence the phrase "hindsight is 20/20".
Personally, I'd love to have debated with Kohberger. I'd probably have really annoyed him as he annoyed others. Because I'm certain I'm much more knowledgeable than he concerning methodology in crime commission. No, I'm not an arrogant narcissist like him. Just very confident. Bye bye to Bryan for his ineptness it was his undoing. If it weren't for his need to prove himself better than everyone else he could have been an asset to the fields of criminology/criminal behavior analysis.
@@MrTLsnow ..I see you watched Zodiac. Did you like it? Edited to add..My favorite part was the Jim Dunbar show, where the call came in from a male voice that said; "This is the Zodiac speaking." He sounded so much like Leigh Allen. But only here. I'd know. I interviewed him for 4 hours/26 minutes.
Ok so you lost the questioner’s audio. But couldn’t you put the text on the screen? Thanks for this nevertheless. It’s great to hear some intelligent insight into college life with this TA.
This guy's comment that the grading seemed to be based on BK's own standards for himself as a doctoral student suggests such a degree of narcissism that BK could not even see beyond his own point of view.
LEARNING BRYAN WAS BULLIED A LOT GROWING UP=PAIN=ANGER MENTAL MEDS WERE MIXED =CONFUSION SOCIAL INEPT+NO SUPPORT INTELLIGENT. .COMMON MENTAL HANDICAPPED FRUSTRATION ANGER EXPLODES...WISH ALL SCHOOLS TAUGHT AA 12STEP LIFE SKILLS TOOLS SOCIALIZE ACCEPTANCE SELF OTHERS HELPS
They “the public” noticed him wearing gloves at the grocery store etc. Was he wearing gloves at school? Or did anyone notice cuts or scratches on his hands after the murders?
That was according to some "mysterious anonymous person who says they have a relative inside the investigation in Pennsylvania". By the time Pennsylvania was involved, Moscow knew they had their man. Also, if BK had the slightest fear his fingerprints were inside the murder house, he would also know his finger prints were all over Moscow and Pullman. That whole gloves in the grocery store has someone laughing that anyone would believe it. Sorry.
It's not uncommon for students or people in cold weather territory to wear gloves during wintertime. A classmate of his said everyone was covered up in class with jackets gloves, hats. I believed it was really, really cold days after the murders.
He's a tremendous witness. I wonder, as the Moscow Police Chief has implored people who knew the suspect to withhold commenting to the media, if it would be possible to share their info. with the Moscow P.D. and ensure that this isn't the kind of material that belongs in a courtroom? Before going ahead with media interviews, first reach out to the police detectives who have to build a case that can convict him.
I'm sure there are hundreds of people that have had encounters with him like this one. Imo they have enough evidence to put him away without a single witness account.
TA can be harsh graders whether they are murderers or not. Just this past semester, I had TA that was absolutely brutal and the grade would not be changed no matter what the reasoning.
If they spoke up he might have murdered them that's the weird thing. 1:22 i guess the students will be a bit happy he is arrested so their papers aren't graded as harshly. 3:42 when students are turning in papers of stick men or whatever and they're getting 100s you know something's going on! new teacher grades even tougher 🤦♂
This reminds me of the Annie Marie Le murder by a controlling Yale Lab Tech Raymond John Clark III in 2009. (Sentenced to 44 years) Same elitist Professor Moriarty-like attitude... Clark thinks he can out think the system on technicallity like OJ and Anthony. Being strict isn't a crime but murder is...
I never understood untenured teachers being harsh graders. It makes them look like they're not getting across, rather than their students being idiots.
Was Bryan wearing gloves when he was teaching? People saying he wore gloves after to not leave fingerprints but I think he may have been hiding cuts???
I read he was seen wearing gloves in a grocery store but idk if he did elsewhere, like fueling up at gas stations. If he had worn them in class I think we would have heard about it by now cuz it would've been such a bizarre conspicuous thing and would've been a dumb, suspicious thing to do for a classroom of students to see.
@@pippishortstocking7913 They we’re pointing out abrasions on his hands on police body cams when he was stopped in Indiana and if that’s what we see, think how much worse they would have been just after the murders.
@@sharonfullarton1549 that'd be a good question for his students. If they noticed he had bandaids on his hands in class. Gloves would be such a conspicuous thing to put on. I figure he would wear bandaids & have a story ready to explain why he was wearing them. I'm not a very observant person. Not confident I'd notice my teacher's bandaids lol
Well - also that time of the semester HIS classes were getting harder and HE was having to do a ton of work - that is crunch time - just before finals.
Actually Comp. Science... that is not true. It actually depends on the degree and the school/professors. My daughter did all her classes up front. Then did her research & dissertation at the very end. And as Nancy Vickers pointed out... my daughter was always stressing around finals, which could explain behavior changes. However, I did hear on another news outlet that they had DNA evidence that linked the suspect to the crime scene. That’s gonna be hard to defend against.
@@cessna2737 Now I remember they probably did take some courses. But my impression was they had a lot of time on their hand (compared to undergraduate students), even for engineering departments, and most of the time when they headed to campus building, it's either teaching classes or going to their "office".
Only the devil can do such a evil thing. You see how close he can penetrate your life and keep moving. Those young ladies were beautiful did not deserve to die in that evil way.
It's not about looks it's the age group the reason this case is so massive is because of the age of victims if it were 85 year olds no one would care it's right in the thick of the social media age 18 to 25 yo always on the net or social media unfortunately that's why there are so many immature childish comments.
no wonder hes so confident to be taken back to moscow. hes trained himself for court and he knows in a small town like moscow he has higher chance cuz he thinks hes really good
From the UK, not familiar with the legal process in my own country, let alone yours, could things like this be detrimental to the process? All this speculation? I hope for some kind of justice.
No. The US courts only allow factual evidence in and every bit of evidence is argued if it’s in doubt. This could be used as a testament of his character before and then after the incident but it could be construed as opinion unless they have several students and or faculty to corroborate.
The only way it could be damaging is "trial by media", in which the general public has seen so much media coverage leaning one way or the other that it's very hard to find an unbiased jury. In a case like this, finding jurors who aren't already decided in their opinions of the defendant will be rough.
A change of venue to another court can also be requested in an attempt to find jurors who aren't local and may not know as much, but again, hard to do when the case is international news.
Most TAs grade harshly and are not liked by the students. Is any of this useful? Character assassinations like this make it next to impossible to find an unbiased jury.
Him being a 'bad grader' probably only means that his level was higher, and he wanted the students to be better, aim higher... He didn't have a low bar... So that "bad grader" is actually a good thing. When students get good graders easier they stop becoming better...
See people will always know how that person was! Was never expecting this guy I was thinking of a college student did it! Strange story we’ll find out more information nexts few months!
@Utterly Demented he’s argumentative. Believes he’s the smartest person in the room. I don’t think he committed this crime thinking he would be caught. He was at least confident until the court appearance yesterday that he would still get away with it.
Jeez, these poor kids are all going through it right now, kinda traumatizing. The worst thing my TA did in college was get caught in a prostitution sting.
They will be mentally traumatised for life...... just like myself some have to be so strong because if not the trauma will haunt you and kill you I suffer ptsd and bi polor it's horrific I hope they see a pychotrist and get medication and lots of support
So much media coverage could blow this case in court. Authorities need to cease all interviews until he is tried in a court of law. Defense attorneys will be looking to remove any negative public perceptions of the accused.
@@Decal0327 Trial by media will blow the case and he’ll literally go free because media coverage? Is that what you’re saying? Because that’s basically every high profile case then lol
Off-topic, I realize, but I want to address "grading." After dinking around for two years at U of Pittsburgh I finally decided I'd major in Biology. I was surrounded by wannabe doctors. Many many students in early bio courses - which were not fluff; they were difficult. I went to my first bio professor and respectfully complained about the first test (I earned a D). He listened and didn't address any of my "points". In stead he just smiled slightly and said, "Ten percent of you earned an A. That's all I'm concerned about." I shut up, thanked him, left his office, and decided that I had learned a great lesson. My educational experience was much more gratifying after this happened. I learned how to LEARN and tested well - in fact, as students said the tests were getting harder, I thought they were easier! All because I knew there was a standard that I wanted to strive for, and I immersed myself.
The scary thing is that the majority of this evil people got no criminal record at all , they literally walked among us any time of the day
Some of these evil people also get elected to Congress and support terror cells around the world with American tax dollars.
Mental health needs more attention
Pennsylvania is now going back to all unsolved similar cases trying to match them with Psycho Brian.
Walk **
I wonder though, I come from the Philippines & this is not a common theme. Robbery, drug crimes are. But not so much homicides for no reason. Usually money is the incentive because it’s a third world country. But most, not all, are able to get by even without much & be somewhat happy. There is a strong sense of community. Which brings me to..
Why is this more popular in U.S.? The creepy looking early to mid 20’s guy who was bullied in school turned murderer. Is it really mental health or is it the lack of community & togetherness which breed loneliness & spiral down to psychopathy?
Mental health sometimes I feel is used as a crutch because it’s the easiest to blame.
It kind of sucks that we cannot hear the questions, but only his answers
Someone was asking him questions, you say? Hmm... I thought he just had really, REALLY bad ADD, periodically causing him to fall into a daydream state... 😁
I’m sort of trying to guess what the leading questions are 😅 I can totally understand this dudes disbelief when connecting the dots too!
Maybe he wrote the questions on his own computer, and he's the only one in the conversation.🤷♂️
The answers pretty much tell you what was asked
@@GodWeenSatan
So, you were probably good at Jeopardy, huh?
The whole country is following this story. RIP angels, you did not die in vain. Justice will be served
“Dying in vain” is not the correct phrase. The phrase is used for deaths occurring during a worthy mission or cause. “The soldiers did not die in vain.”
NO, not the whole country. I asked 3 people yesterday what they thought and they didn’t know even my own family and some of my coworkers know nothing about it.
@@fitnessbabe7958 because they're four random people I don't know.
Nope, I know what you mean, but they died a senseless death, and nothing good will come out of it whatever. That's a hard thing to take in, but there you are.
@@fitnessbabe7958 well good then they won't have trouble finding jurors when and if it goes to trial! Because that's a fear some have being it's been so publicized! I too asked some friends and fam what their thoughts were on a suspect finally being identified, only half knew what I was speaking of .. so I think it's safer to say "half the country" is following this story... 🤷🏼♀️
This guy illustrated his points so well
@Utterly Demented Your mom likes it like that
Guy? Sure it's not a chick?
I had a sub teacher in junior high and high school who turned out to have murdered his 2 wives. Others thought him odd but I never would have thought him a murderer. I learned that I can not judge people.
Blue Beard
I also do not judge people but have a very strong intuition and trust my gut. I will
Pickup on odd traits of another without even speaking to them. Body language, affect or lack of, and of course eyes. Not a psychic at all but I am what they call an EMPATH so I feel very very strongly before my brain can even rationalize what I’m seeing.
@@I.can_feel_it.in.the_air that's what he is talking about because some people are good at it.. Our mind is always observing others, it's part of survival psychology.
Being judgey about others is different.
I don't care.
I know the feeling: in 2005 I watched the TV Broadcast the Headlines: “The BTK Killer has been captured”. I saw the picture of a person in an orange jumpsuit, and the name Dennis Rader..
I remembered a person who I used to call my friend back in 1966 -1968, who I was in the Air Force with me. At first I though that this must be another person. I did not recognize the picture because the last time I saw Dennis Radar was in July 1968, some 37 years previously.
I did some research and sure enough, the person who had been a friend of mine in the late 1960’s ended up as a Serial Killer years later!
It's all about the Green River killer!!! WA WA!!! All we do is WA WA.
Dennis Rader (not Radar)
I am sure you are more comfortable with this framing, but it isn't as though he became a different person or that murdering many people just happened to him. He was a violent psychopath, even when you knew him, and just really good at hiding it
@@emanimal728 are you one of Jeffrey Dahmer's surviving victims?
@@rachelk4805 perhaps since he was a narcissistic personality, he wasn't hiding at all. Albeit, he lacked empathy and thusly those contributing characteristics that manifest emphatic displays of emotion on someone baseline, such as guilt or remorse?
So the behavior and hygiene of a pHd student working as a teacher's assistant changed during finals week...OK, just in case you've never been a pHd student, this is not odd behavior. Anyone who is TAing serious classes and doesn't look disheveled at some point during finals week is doing some serious drugs, or a very poor job.
These murders are horrible, but this guy should be presumed innocent until proven guilty, and all we have heard so far is that DNA at the scene matches someone who may or may not be related to Kohberger, and that there was a white Elantra at the house. DNA is good, sure, but there's a lot of ways for that to happen. Was it a pool of his blood? Or was it a shirt he donated to Goodwill and one of these young folks bought it because they liked the look? I am seeing a lot of talking heads on news shows basically saying this guy is a serial killer because he didn't know these people and he was studying criminal behavior, but that presumes he did it.
Maybe he did, but for crying out loud, lets act like we have a real justice system, please.
First of all, the DNA they found came directly from the knife sheath left behind the night of the murders, not something randomly found in the house. Secondly, this student's observations of his T.A. was never meant to be some open and shut case proving guilt of the crime. It's a drop of information, an observation, a witness to Kohberger over a period of time. That's all. His testimony about the fake trial between the students and Kohberger is certainly something to consider combined with the rest of the evidence. Never a stand alone decision maker, yet not something to entirely dismiss either. It's a puzzle to put together with some evidence weighing much more heavily than others. This is some of the lighter information to come forward. I'm not sure it will make it through the speculation part that his lawyers will want thrown out of the records. I'm not a lawyer, so don't know. But it seems quite relevant to Kohberger's state of mind at that time and that there may have been a trigger event. Doesn't explain why he allegedly picked these people though. There is likely more to come...
The police revealed a lot more evidence on the PC affidavit that came out after your comment. It doesn't seem like there is reasonable doubt at this point.
I was lab partner with a cute redhaired fellow in college. That summer, he kidnapped a major businessman's wife and held her for ransom. He and his pals got caught, and she's OK.
You never know what people can do, or what their motivation might be.
Looks can be deceiving too. Some say Bryan looks attractive in some pics, I myself don't think so. He looks awkward in most of it. Again, these students classmates of his ,did not paint an out of the ordinary picture of him being suspicious, except the tiredness but could be from cramming for his final exams and all the sleepless anxious nights he'll be caught anytime after the killings.
I think coldburger ...was planning to catch one of those girls alone.........and do his Ultimate serial killer fantasy...but he ran into an unexpected encounter with multiple people...and he went bonkers and took out 4 people and he left........
@@georgegil2299 Nah. That was a party house with 6 roommates. The place was full of people 24x7. K!ller knew very well he'd never get 1 girl alone in there. He knew he was going to have to knife more than one person to escape and that's probably exactly what he wanted. K!ller wanted to make his own Halloween slasher movie.
So who did that
That is why you buy a gun. You learn how to use it like a pro. And you take it with you where ever you go. And if you cannot take it someplace....you do not go.
It sounds like he began the year taking his TA position very seriously, and really wanted to contribute to the level of education the students were receiving,
by setting high standards.
But later, became discouraged after being reprimanded by his superiors.
He may have been adonished to lighten up a bit.
After all... higher marks make the program look more successful.
He may have felt offended or undermined.
Thus going to the extreme of giving undeserved high marks.
This may have caused him to feel discouraged and disappointed in what he perceived to be a lower standard of education.
Perhaps.
Isn’t it so weird how they left out the questioning part 😅. It’s like he’s chatting to himself lol
Do you not know why this was done.
@@cath1895why?
I must say that this interview was done very well. Straight to the fact. And my heart goes out to each and every one of the kids at the school as well because this has had to have taken a toll on everyone of them
It's crazy to think how many people this has affected besides the victims and their circle. I hope everyone is able to get mental health support if they need it, especially the younger adults, like this student.
What the heck are you talking about? You can't hear the interviewers questions. There are long silent pauses, and the answers lack context without hearing the question. Especially at the halfway point where he talks about the day that the class argued with Bryan about grades and the time he started seeing a change in him.
1:22 i guess the students will be a bit happy he is arrested so their papers aren't graded as harshly.
3:42 when students are turning in papers of stick men or whatever and they're getting 100s you know something's going on 4:00!
new teacher grades even tougher 🤦♂
Eugenics.. prevent socially awkward, mentally ill, democrats, or plain unattractive people from having children. There, incel problem solved
@@dannyx498 Most Incels are right-wing.
Eloquent young guy! Who still keeps his head after finding out super creepy, freaky information … he'll make a good lawyer.
And an even better human being.
@@barneyronnie He certainly had a great example of what NOT to do
@@barneyronnie lol
I find him annoying and effeminate. He needs to learn how to not speak like a snotty teenage girl if he expects to be taken serious when he grows up. He's in a criminal justice program, not law school.
Yes but now he can’t help the case by being a witness since he already talked to the media.
The chief has been asking people that knows him or has any little information about him, to not talk to the media.
Not only in Moscow. in New Zealand we are following this closely! It was new year's conversation at the table
Talking about blond Coeds that none of you know around the family super table, sound fun.
🤣 😂 🤣 😂 Sounds like a lame boring new year party
Talk about your own country 😒 this does not concern your or your family.
@@dil3841 it's all over the news in every country. The polar bears in the Arctic probably know about this psycho.
@@j.m.221 lol true 😂, it’s crazy how big this case has become, I didn’t even realize. At least the killer was caught, imagine if they never found him
This guy seems very intelligent - in fact he's definitely the sharpest person I've yet heard talk about Kohberger! Far more satisfying observations than any of the "professional" law enforcement people.
maybe that's cos he knew him personally. Duh!
obviously he knew him personally 😐
What a low bar you have for intelligence: “Totally” “like” a harsh grader, so if we were “gonna be like an attorney.” This student is not particularly bright, thinks he is, and dramatizes every interaction as “proof” of his TA’s guilt: over-articulates his terms to affect intelligence. He and his classmates “thought the TA was weird” and from there they made their conclusion of guilt. They really will be “like great lawyers.” Give me a break. Who knows if Kohberger did it or not? These students’ hasty generalizations and post hoc claims such as “He was more distracted after the murders because he graded more leniently” are not a sign of anything. The murders occurred on November 13. The WSU term ended December 13. During that time, students, like this one, are submitting a pile of assignments, many last-minute and late, and Kohberger is finishing his major assignments for a PhD program while trying to grade hundreds of assignments (he had three classes to grade). Also, he probably took heat for grading his students too harshly, so he figured “whatever,” slapped a grade on, and focused on his own studies.
If this is so compelling, then why not ask this “expert” how his other TA’s looked? Did any others seem more stressed at the time? Should we conclude they are guilty too? What about other students or faculty? Was anyone less invested in grading or completing work? Was anyone on campus more stressed? Perhaps they are guilty too? Give me a break. This bs does nothing to help the process. If this kid was as intelligent as you claim, I would think, as a CJ major, he would know what constitutes evidence and what does not.
I’m sure the observations were “satisfying” for you; happily your satiety is not a litmus test in a criminal proceeding.
He’s a student, not a random civilian.
@@jqpublic1630 try hard
R. I. P. TO ALL FOUR SOULS! 🕊️🙏🏼
Ok, for the future. Anybody doing this, please read the questions outloud before answering. Thank you.
I think he wrote them himself, and was the only one in the conversation.
He's reading from chat
Looks like this was an online meeting and was set to record incoming audio only, and not outgoing audio
just heartbreaking bro i couldnt imagine what the families are going through im wishing them all my blessings
Now this is a true college student.
EXACTLY
Ignorant and still a little high off sangria while If had a slight knowledge the smell of blood would have been evident
As opposed to who?
@@cccsssish your mom
Dont judge yet .. some people have secrets 😅
A 28 year old teaching 20 year olds seems pretty young
That's incredibly common. He was a TA not a teacher.
Grading you too harshly? You mean he demanded more from his students than mediocrity? Poor poor pitiful you.
Maybe not a bad grader, maybe just poor students
I wonder if the news finds these people, or if these people find the news?
If your criminology instructor turned out to be a mass-murderer, you'd seek out the news as well.
A little bit of both
The people call the news
It literally depends
They find the news. The thirst for fame is real
Future lawyer guy with a ponytail thinks his instructor is disheveled because he didn't shave one day during finals so he must've done it.
100% Speculation. Most TAs are absolutely awkward and nerdy. All students complain about their grades and how the TA grades harshly. This is not a behavior change. Most TA’s are very busy and don’t have allot of time between meeting students, grading, and their own studies.
Thank you & you are right.
This analysis of the suspect's behaviour proves nothing!
do they have the paper trail to demonstrate this behavior.? All 100's after that date and no 100's before...
And planning homicide
@@dianayount2122 Agreed. Now that the proof has been revealed this guy planned this all along.
@@stjohnbaby agreed.
Wish we could hear or read the questions being asked of the guy here. His detailed responses saves the whole video to some degree
He was probably quiet bc he couldn't wait to hear people's reactions to that. Of course he would be all ears. That would titalate a killer. And the apartment people under him said he never slept and was up late at night making noise.
probably to make it seem normal for the day of
He graded hard to play GOD he loves having the power to play on people’s emotions. So he was good to some and not others. If someone was grading him as a murderer thankfully he would get an F
good point
yes, its about power
I mean, maybe, but he might have just been a hard grader because he was a hard grader. Not *everything* a narcissistic person does is done to feed their narcissism.
@@SimBol1216 this is true ! We just don’t like him so we judge
@@beaulieuc8910 thank you !
They didn’t like him because he had high standards? This is the state of our education system.
As a grad student: the undergrad complaint about TA grading is universal lmao
TA’s always grade way too hard because they’ve got something to prove and act like they weren’t just in the students’ shoes a while earlier…
Relax nerd. Many TAs (why did you add an apostrophe) just take marching orders from the professor on how to grade.
@@joelwillis2043 Why’d you call them a nerd? Bit unnecessary lol
TA? More like tongue yay, in an anusyay.
@@joelwillis2043 Yeah, it was unnecessary to call @whiskyagogo a nerd. It's rather ostensive why he resents TAs. Evidently he's a lousy college student, well he lack proper grammar to comprehend the appropriate usage of an apostrophe. Consequently negating the notion of him being a "nerd", as you so colloquially stated, and reinforcing the likelihood of TAs seemingly appearance as tormentors for righteously correcting the excessive grammatical errors undoubtedly therein present in the work.
@@steph.uhknee Hey! Bleeding heart? ExZIPPIT A!
OMG he is grading us to harshly boo woo, good luck in the real world plebe 😂
Let's be honest being a TA is a huge red flag in the first place.
Really interesting to hear this intelligent student's observations... to notice that Kohberger became more preoccupied and then to describe it as extreme preoccupation after the time of the murders is significant i.e. his behavior noticeably changed after the murders - which would of course not be unexpected. Nothing that is all that tangible in terms of pointing to his guilt, but certainly fits in the puzzle... Another student who actually took classes with Kohberger said something similar, i.e. he was very chatty in the immediate aftermath, but then grew very quiet when their class would talk about the murders...
Can you imagine what his reaction must have been when the police announced in early December that they were looking for the occupant of a white Hyundai Elantra?! Bryan probably needed to change into his brown trousers before he left the house after hearing that....
I'm baffled about his "motive" for committing these murders. I don't know that the police have figured it out yet, but the whole situation seems so strange.
@@HighlanderNorth1 well. 73years here, my life observation would be: any Killer and/or murderer (s) reason is inhuman, unreasonable, ill, ZERO, no brainer,for a big."duh", what are you thinking?. Just saying. The reasons they give are all upside down. All for one, one for all Them.!
@@HighlanderNorth1 IMO, his motivation was to prove he is smarter and better than the other predators; and to observe how well his plans and actions brought about his desired results. I'm sure he was hoping for an A+.
@@a.racetiffany2966
I'll look past your insult, and I'll point out that people usually require actual reasons for doing the things they do. That includes murdering other people. If it was as simple as you make it out to be, then we would have no need whatsoever for terms like "motive". But without knowing the reasons why a crime was committed, it's much more difficult to find the suspects!
Lol white issues⚪️🗑💩👿🤡
His students probably just thought he finally got laid or something! 😂
This guy said that the students were complaining about BK's grading standards and the professor "put him on trial" can you imagine 75 people criticizing you? Could this have been the thing that tipped BK over mentally?
Interesting idea. Seems plausible if he was misguidedly hoping to build camaraderie with the students by grading tough to initiate a certain type of interaction from them in the first place. Like he wanted to be looked up to and approached individually to request grade changes but then the professor put them in equal ground where students were critical of him all the sudden, "half of 150 students in the class" (75 people), that's a lot of criticism if you can't take any in the first place.
Again innocent until proven guilty. So grabbing a student who doesnt know him.... To throw him down. Man media is doing a great job at bad journalism as always. Until i hear solid facts this all is just blabber. Blah blah blah i don't know him im a student.
Bless u for your courage to speak out🌻
Of all the people that havr come out testifying that they knew bryan ---- not one has been a friend or girlfriend that he hung out with outside of school.
All have been classmates in Pennsylvania or Washington, that spoke to him in class but never met outside of class, plus one jogging buddy. Outside of that, there were friends from highschool, who often said they lost touch with him after junior year..
Highschool was 10 years ago.
Has Bryan NEVER had any contact with anyone or any friends within the last 5-9 years?
Pretty much seems like “they all” are loners, didn’t hear of any past or present gf’s. Or none that will come forth and admit it!
And the one that went jogging with him did it so he wouldn’t be alone after midnight on runs. Oh the irony
Thats a big stretch. Just because the only people willing to run their mouths in front of a camera, give up their privacy and join the insane media circus are distant acquaintances does not=omg Bryan has no friends!!!! People close to him are likely keeping their mouths shut (by advice of attorneys) so they don't jeopardize his case. Not everyone is an attention wh*re or willing to risk having their lives destroyed by an internet mob for just being friends with the guy. The lack of critical thinking skills I see in these comments is truly astounding.
These guys are grabbing their personal five seconds of fame. Real Friends don‘t ramble about someone.
His neighbor downstairs said she saw a female in his car onetime and one came into his apartment.
This will be a lifetime movie down the road! So glad this case did not go cold, perhaps some peace and justice to the families of the victims.
ugh it sucks that this horrible tragedy will likely be dramatized, possibly without the consent of the families😞
He probably heard students talk bad about him and that effected him more than the average person
All this endless speculation based on the assumption that he is guilty. What if he didn't do it?
Right! No one knows the details of this tragedy.
Not yet, atleast.
I like the fact you can’t hear the questions.
So the class basically embarrassed him and belittled him in front of the whole class. Probably made fun of for half his life. Real fkn nice. Killer or not doesn't sound like something you do to someone.
must be a really crappy university based on this guys speaking skills. "like, like ,like, ya you know " overuse of the word "like" only means you dont know the English language very well.
Like I know like. Like this guy
Wow! You not only have an education from this guy, but also on-the-job experience learning from an alleged killer! You deserve a refund on your college bill!
Student wears the same color orange as his teacher 🤣
Everybody wants fame from the suspects name. It's so sad and ridiculous 😂
Exactly...why didn't they report their observations of suspicious behavior until now
@@christiehamilton7536 - What suspicious behavior?
@@christiehamilton7536 he’s not really reporting suspicious behavior, he’s explaining his behavior in the class room in general
@@christiehamilton7536 What would he say? "My TA has stubble lately, pretty sure he's a mass murderer"
The PD specifically asked to hear about people's whose demeanor changed. Brian's obviously did. Why did nobody leave a tip about him? Is it because there's too many humans and too many of them are weird, that to speculate would mean everyone's a killer? 🤔
Well he was was strange at a baseline so the change was marginal
Most things, observations seem subtle in the moment they are happening. He probably speculated Kohberger's change in grading was because he was angry after the student confrontation or fake trial they had. And he was probably right. It's not until after finding out the truth that retrospectively things become clearer. Hence the phrase "hindsight is 20/20".
Personally, I'd love to have debated with Kohberger. I'd probably have really annoyed him as he annoyed others. Because I'm certain I'm much more knowledgeable than he concerning methodology in crime commission. No, I'm not an arrogant narcissist like him. Just very confident. Bye bye to Bryan for his ineptness it was his undoing. If it weren't for his need to prove himself better than everyone else he could have been an asset to the fields of criminology/criminal behavior analysis.
He didn't finish the Doctorate. What a waste of a life and educuation
Toot toot
easy there einstein
@@Tempo50 ..Well..of course. I'm my best fan. 😊
@@MrTLsnow ..I see you watched Zodiac. Did you like it? Edited to add..My favorite part was the Jim Dunbar show, where the call came in from a male voice that said; "This is the Zodiac speaking." He sounded so much like Leigh Allen. But only here. I'd know. I interviewed him for 4 hours/26 minutes.
Why did they mute the questions?
He's pretending he didn't write them.
To maintain anonymity of the interviewer given how sensitive this case is.
Ok so you lost the questioner’s audio. But couldn’t you put the text on the screen? Thanks for this nevertheless. It’s great to hear some intelligent insight into college life with this TA.
You can see and feel the emotionally heart-wrenching testimony coming from this young man.
Well that's one question answered. I thought this was a girl.
Exaggeration much lol
Hardly........
Doesn’t seem like he’s too invested
You can? 🥴
After the killing, he was easier grader, less well kept, less talkative, and distracted.
Students always complain about graders. I was a math grader in college and students would come and complain and beg for points.
This guy's comment that the grading seemed to be based on BK's own standards for himself as a doctoral student suggests such a degree of narcissism that BK could not even see beyond his own point of view.
who’s asking the questions and what are they?
The reporter in a zoom call
I thought this dude was in a jump suit from jail 😂😂😂😂🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️
LEARNING BRYAN WAS BULLIED A LOT GROWING UP=PAIN=ANGER MENTAL MEDS WERE MIXED =CONFUSION SOCIAL INEPT+NO SUPPORT INTELLIGENT.
.COMMON MENTAL HANDICAPPED FRUSTRATION ANGER EXPLODES...WISH ALL SCHOOLS TAUGHT AA 12STEP LIFE SKILLS TOOLS SOCIALIZE ACCEPTANCE SELF OTHERS HELPS
They “the public” noticed him wearing gloves at the grocery store etc. Was he wearing gloves at school? Or did anyone notice cuts or scratches on his hands after the murders?
I beleive by then, law enforcement had been in touch with his family, I think he knew that and was being extremely cautious about surveillance
That was according to some "mysterious anonymous person who says they have a relative inside the investigation in Pennsylvania". By the time Pennsylvania was involved, Moscow knew they had their man. Also, if BK had the slightest fear his fingerprints were inside the murder house, he would also know his finger prints were all over Moscow and Pullman. That whole gloves in the grocery store has someone laughing that anyone would believe it. Sorry.
@@AFloridaSon it's not about fingerprints anymore, it's touch dna now
Great questions
It's not uncommon for students or people in cold weather territory to wear gloves during wintertime. A classmate of his said everyone was covered up in class with jackets gloves, hats. I believed it was really, really cold days after the murders.
So, when did this alleged confrontation of bryan happen? Did this pressure and embarrassment cause him to snap?
Sounds like your papers weren’t good enough 😆
He's a tremendous witness. I wonder, as the Moscow Police Chief has implored people who knew the suspect to withhold commenting to the media, if it would be possible to share their info. with the Moscow P.D. and ensure that this isn't the kind of material that belongs in a courtroom? Before going ahead with media interviews, first reach out to the police detectives who have to build a case that can convict him.
That’s exactly what I was thinking.
I was thinking the same. This guys could be a great court witness
I'm sure there are hundreds of people that have had encounters with him like this one. Imo they have enough evidence to put him away without a single witness account.
It’s sad that a murderer can grade students any way he likes and there is really no recourse for the students.
TA can be harsh graders whether they are murderers or not. Just this past semester, I had TA that was absolutely brutal and the grade would not be changed no matter what the reasoning.
@@feurigerStern Very sad. There needs to be student appeals process.
If they spoke up he might have murdered them that's the weird thing.
1:22 i guess the students will be a bit happy he is arrested so their papers aren't graded as harshly.
3:42 when students are turning in papers of stick men or whatever and they're getting 100s you know something's going on!
new teacher grades even tougher 🤦♂
Do you have any videos of him teaching the class? Or recordings ?
Sounds like a professor I had in College.
Now it makes me wonder if he was a murderer.
Bit of a leap 😅
😆
Why would Jake Gylenhaal do this?
Jake Herman Munster Gyllenhaal. Fixed it.
This reminds me of the Annie Marie Le murder by a controlling Yale Lab Tech Raymond John Clark III in 2009. (Sentenced to 44 years)
Same elitist Professor Moriarty-like attitude...
Clark thinks he can out think the system on technicallity like OJ and Anthony.
Being strict isn't a crime but murder is...
This could have been the very guy that was stalking one of the girls.
I never understood untenured teachers being harsh graders. It makes them look like they're not getting across, rather than their students being idiots.
Career suicide, I agree
OMG...makes me wonder if that was a trigger?
Maybe one of the kids was in the class?
Or lodged a complaint.
Where was he a T.A.?
Was Bryan wearing gloves when he was teaching? People saying he wore gloves after to not leave fingerprints but I think he may have been hiding cuts???
I read he was seen wearing gloves in a grocery store but idk if he did elsewhere, like fueling up at gas stations. If he had worn them in class I think we would have heard about it by now cuz it would've been such a bizarre conspicuous thing and would've been a dumb, suspicious thing to do for a classroom of students to see.
@@pippishortstocking7913 They we’re pointing out abrasions on his hands on police body cams when he was stopped in Indiana and if that’s what we see, think how much worse they would have been just after the murders.
@@sharonfullarton1549 that'd be a good question for his students. If they noticed he had bandaids on his hands in class. Gloves would be such a conspicuous thing to put on. I figure he would wear bandaids & have a story ready to explain why he was wearing them. I'm not a very observant person. Not confident I'd notice my teacher's bandaids lol
There would be less serial killers in USA if we had real consequences like firing squad and or hangings
Oh my god Hayden! What a trip to find out a TA that you knew and who was grading your papers was the Idaho university killer!
A sensitive young guy. We can see that this event has shaken him.
I didn't think he was the killer til I saw his wrist with that cut on dec 15th
You saw his cut in person
Did he have a cut on the video where he was pulled over?
Yeah people who don't talk to him or know him clearly know him now. Oh yeah he was in a great mood, he's a killer
Well - also that time of the semester HIS classes were getting harder and HE was having to do a ton of work - that is crunch time - just before finals.
Phd students don't really take classes I think. They start the first step of their research/dissertation.
Actually Comp. Science... that is not true. It actually depends on the degree and the school/professors. My daughter did all her classes up front. Then did her research & dissertation at the very end. And as Nancy Vickers pointed out... my daughter was always stressing around finals, which could explain behavior changes. However, I did hear on another news outlet that they had DNA evidence that linked the suspect to the crime scene. That’s gonna be hard to defend against.
@@cessna2737 Now I remember they probably did take some courses. But my impression was they had a lot of time on their hand (compared to undergraduate students), even for engineering departments, and most of the time when they headed to campus building, it's either teaching classes or going to their "office".
now THIS is breaking news! I'm so proud of you ABC!!!!
This is what the people NEED to know about!!!!!
Only the devil can do such a evil thing. You see how close he can penetrate your life and keep moving. Those young ladies were beautiful did not deserve to die in that evil way.
Ethan didn't deserve this either. I know you're probably only focused on the girls cuz you're a guy, but there were FOUR murdered, not just THREE.
What if they were unattractive?
It's not about looks it's the age group the reason this case is so massive is because of the age of victims if it were 85 year olds no one would care it's right in the thick of the social media age 18 to 25 yo always on the net or social media unfortunately that's why there are so many immature childish comments.
Tell all this to Law Enforcement!
no wonder hes so confident to be taken back to moscow. hes trained himself for court and he knows in a small town like moscow he has higher chance cuz he thinks hes really good
@Young Goodman Brown how is that a conspiracy theory? It's actually quite logical & likely accurate in some way.
Kohberger can barely talk to girls there's no chance he will say anything in court he will be silent and blank like he has been
@Young Goodman Brown Love your handle, one of my favorite short stories.
Why does it look like he was being interviewed in a jail
From the UK, not familiar with the legal process in my own country, let alone yours, could things like this be detrimental to the process? All this speculation? I hope for some kind of justice.
No. The US courts only allow factual evidence in and every bit of evidence is argued if it’s in doubt. This could be used as a testament of his character before and then after the incident but it could be construed as opinion unless they have several students and or faculty to corroborate.
The only way it could be damaging is "trial by media", in which the general public has seen so much media coverage leaning one way or the other that it's very hard to find an unbiased jury. In a case like this, finding jurors who aren't already decided in their opinions of the defendant will be rough.
A change of venue to another court can also be requested in an attempt to find jurors who aren't local and may not know as much, but again, hard to do when the case is international news.
Not really.
What we have seen from court docs is only a few things. They have more that was not released.
He is looking at the death penalty x4.
@@sbont4723
Only need 1 conviction.
Most TAs grade harshly and are not liked by the students. Is any of this useful? Character assassinations like this make it next to impossible to find an unbiased jury.
Not true. I was a TA/TF while earning my PhD...
God bless all the victims’ families
I think this kid is hearing voices in his head. He keeps responding to nothing. Anyone else notice this? Do you think his parents should be notified?
Interesting insights!
Him being a 'bad grader' probably only means that his level was higher, and he wanted the students to be better, aim higher... He didn't have a low bar... So that "bad grader" is actually a good thing.
When students get good graders easier they stop becoming better...
See people will always know how that person was! Was never expecting this guy I was thinking of a college student did it! Strange story we’ll find out more information nexts few months!
Great insights, wish we could hear the questions.
Pretty good insight of what is to come during trial.
@Utterly Demented he’s argumentative. Believes he’s the smartest person in the room. I don’t think he committed this crime thinking he would be caught. He was at least confident until the court appearance yesterday that he would still get away with it.
i don't understand. he got fired for being a strict grader?
Wonder if he had, a sweet side to him😮??!!
If he did, women would be at his side. I doubt he was sweet. That bar scene with the women and bar staff gave that away.
@California Dreaming not killing everyone you meet does not mean a person has empathy 😂
Now in hindsight he looks creepy but in real life he just looks like every doctor or PhD student
The whole world is following this case
Jeez, these poor kids are all going through it right now, kinda traumatizing. The worst thing my TA did in college was get caught in a prostitution sting.
🤣 so did a teacher when I was in h.s.
They will be mentally traumatised for life...... just like myself some have to be so strong because if not the trauma will haunt you and kill you I suffer ptsd and bi polor it's horrific I hope they see a pychotrist and get medication and lots of support
So much media coverage could blow this case in court. Authorities need to cease all interviews until he is tried in a court of law.
Defense attorneys will be looking to remove any negative public perceptions of the accused.
How exactly will this blow the case? These people aren’t relevant in court, it’s just their experience with him
@@aClownBaby- character witnesses
@@aClownBaby- Look into Trial by Media.
@@platanous Character witnesses won’t make or break a case
@@Decal0327 Trial by media will blow the case and he’ll literally go free because media coverage? Is that what you’re saying? Because that’s basically every high profile case then lol
Enough with potentially and allegedly
wish we could hear the quetions asked
maybe someone recorded or sum or took notes of what he said
Off-topic, I realize, but I want to address "grading." After dinking around for two years at U of Pittsburgh I finally decided I'd major in Biology. I was surrounded by wannabe doctors. Many many students in early bio courses - which were not fluff; they were difficult. I went to my first bio professor and respectfully complained about the first test (I earned a D).
He listened and didn't address any of my "points". In stead he just smiled slightly and said, "Ten percent of you earned an A. That's all I'm concerned about."
I shut up, thanked him, left his office, and decided that I had learned a great lesson.
My educational experience was much more gratifying after this happened. I learned how to LEARN and tested well - in fact, as students said the tests were getting harder, I thought they were easier! All because I knew there was a standard that I wanted to strive for, and I immersed myself.