Bryan Kohberger Reacts to Kaylee Goncalves’ Sister Saying He’ll Get “Big Ds” in Prison
New details are shedding light on Bryan Kohberger.
Hours after the 30-year-old was sentenced to life in prison for the November 2022 murders of four University of Idaho students, authorities released documents, viewed by E! News, that share a glimpse of the people he interacted with before the crime.
Among the documents was a March 2024 filing from lead detective Brett Payne, who spoke with a woman—only called “KC” and “C” in the supplemental document—who alleged that she and Kohberger matched on a dating app one or two months before the murders.
After C struggled to match with someone in her area on Tinder, per the filing, she paid for the feature to move her location anywhere in the country to meet someone further away.
“C stated that she matched with Kohberger a short time later and began to talk to him,” Payne wrote. “C said Kohberger told her he was a criminology student at WSU. The two communicated via Tinder and planned for Kohberger to visit C when he was home for Christmas break that year.
“C then told me she had a friend who was murdered in her town a couple of years prior,” he continued. “She said she discussed this with Kohberger. The conversation turned to horror movies and which ones C liked the most. C told Kohberger she liked the Rob Zombie Halloween movies.”
C alleged that the former student—who will complete four consecutive life sentences for the killings of Kaylee Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Madison Mogen and Xana Kernodle—asked her what she thought the worst way to die was.
“C said she thought it would be a knife,” she told the investigator. “C said Kohberger, then asked her something to the effect of ‘like a Ka Bar?’ C said she didn’t know what that was and had to Google it. C said she eventually stopped talking to Kohberger because his questions made her uncomfortable.”
Kyle Green-Pool/Getty Images
During their phone call, C told Payne that when Kohberger was arrested, “she recognized his photo and remembered the comments about the Ka Bar knife.”
Although C told the official that she had tried to call the tip line, Payne noted in the document that he was unable to verify whether she had done so, since he stated there was no record of it. Additionally, he wrote that C told him that she could no longer access her Tinder profile and couldn’t get her user ID.
“This would be needed to compare the Tinder records located on Kohberger’s phone,” he concluded. “At this time, there is nothing to corroborate C’s tip.”
For a closer look at Kohberger’s trial, keep reading.
Who Were Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Ethan Chapin and Xana Kernodle?
Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Madison Mogen, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and her boyfriend Ethan Chapin, 20, were University of Idaho students who lived in an off-campus apartment.
On Nov. 12, 2022—the night before their bodies were found—Goncalves and Mogen were at a nearby sports bar, while Kernodle and Chapin were at the latter’s fraternity party. By 2 a.m. on Nov. 13, the four roommates and Chapin were back at the three-story rental house.
Goncalves was a senior majoring in general studies at the College of Letters, Arts and Social Sciences. She was expected to graduate in December before heading to Austin, Texas, for a job at a marketing firm, her friend Jordyn Quesnell told The New York Times.
Mogen, who was studying marketing, was best friends with Goncalves since the sixth grade. She had plans to move to Boise after graduation, family friend Jessie Frost shared with The Idaho Statesman.
Kernodle was a junior majoring in marketing, the University said at the time. She and Chapin—who majored in recreation, sport and tourism management—had been dating since the spring, the roommates’ neighbor Ellie McKnight told NBC News.
Were There Any Survivors?
Two roommates, Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke, had been home at the time of the murders. In text messages that were unsealed March 6, 2025, Mortensen and Funke tried contacting their roommates on Nov. 13 after the former saw a masked man moving through the house, according to documents obtained by E! News.
“No one is answering,” Mortensen texted Funke at 4:22 a.m. “I’m rlly confused rn.”
She continued to reach out to their roommates, urging them to respond. “Pls answer,” she texted Goncalves at 4:32 a.m. and again at 10:23 a.m. “R u up??”
At 11:58 a.m., a 911 call was placed after Kernodle was found unresponsive, per an additional motion obtained by E! News. A woman named A1 in the transcript described the current situation to the operator.
“One of the roommates who’s passed out and she was drunk last night and she’s not waking up,” she said on the phone. “They saw some man in their house last night.”
Zach Wilkinson-Pool/Getty Images
Who Is Bryan Kohberger and How Was He Found?
Bryan Kohberger, who was charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary, was a doctoral candidate at Washington State University. Over one month after the bodies of Gonclaves, Mogen, Kernodle and Chapin were discovered, Kohberger was taken into custody Dec. 30 in Monroe County, Penn. He was extradited to Idaho Jan. 4, 2023.
As for how authorities connected him to the killings? DNA was found on a knife sheath that was left at the crime scene, prosecutors revealed in June 2023 court documents, per NBC News.
When the DNA didn’t match anyone in the FBI database, authorities ran the DNA through public ancestry websites to create a list of potential suspects, according to the filings. After learning that Kohberger had driven to his parents’ home in Monroe County, local officials then went through their trash and found DNA that tied him to that found on the sheath.
Photo by Ted S. Warren-Pool/Getty Images
What Was Kohberger’s Initial Defense?
At the moment, a motive for the attack has not been detailed and a gag order prevents many involved in the case from speaking publicly, NBC News reported. However, the unsealed documents provided some insight into their initial arguments.
Kohberger’s attorneys argued in a motion obtained by E! News to strike the death penalty that Kohberger—who initially faced death penalty if found guilty on all counts—has autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and that executing him would violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on “cruel and unusual punishment.”
His defense argued that Kohbereger “displays extremely rigid thinking, perseverates on specific topics, processes information on a piecemeal basis, struggles to plan ahead, and demonstrates little insight into his own behaviors and emotions.”
“Due to his ASD, Mr. Kohberger simply cannot comport himself in a manner that aligns with societal expectations of normalcy,” the motion said. “This creates an unconscionable risk that he will be executed because of his disability rather than his culpability.”
Ted S. Warren – Pool/Getty Images
Where Was the Trial Set?
Initially, Kohberger had a judge enter a not-guilty plea to the first-degree murder charges on his behalf after remaining silent at his May 2023 arraignment. Although his trial was set to begin Oct. 2, 2023, Kohberger waived his right to a speedy trial in August 2023.
His trial date—which was scheduled to take place in Ada County, more than 300 miles from Latah County, where the killings took place—was set to begin Aug. 11, 2025.
Latah County Judge John Judge previously ruled in favor of the transfer request made by Kohberger’s defense in September 2024 based on “presumed prejudice” if the trial remained in Latah County.
Ada County Judge Steven Hippler denied the defense’s request to suppress key DNA and other evidence, including cell phone and email records, surveillance footage, past Amazon purchases and DNA evidence in the trial.
Ted S. Warren-Pool/Getty Images
What Was the Verdict in the Trial?
Kohberger’s murder trial was abruptly canceled after he took a plea deal from prosecutors on June 30, 2025. In accepting the deal, Kohberger agreed to plead guilty to four counts of murder and one count of burglary, as well as waive his rights to appeal and ask for a more lenient prison sentence.
He entered his guilty plea on July 2, 2025, confirming with a “yes” after the judge asked if he killed all four victims “willingly, unlawfully, deliberately and with premeditation and malice with forethought.”
NBC News
Did Kohberger Take a Selfie After the Murders?
A selfie Kohberger took the morning after the murders took place was introduced in March 2025. The photograph, which sees him in front of a shower showing a thumbs up, displays how he may fit the description a witness identified as “D.M.” gave in filings, who said the perpetrator had “bushy eyebrows.”
Steve Gonclaves, the father of victim Kaylee, later reacted to the image calling it a “trophy” in an interview with Fox and Friends.
“I know the timeline, I know that he had just returned to the crime scene and he had come back,” Gonclaves said. “He had realized that nobody had called 911.”
As he put it, “To him, that’s his little trophy to let him know like, ‘Hey, I got away with it, nobody’s on me.’”
Monroe County Correctional Facil/UPI/Shutterstock
What Did Kohberger Google Before the Murders?
In a 2025 Dateline documentary about the murders, a former classmate of Kohberger’s detailed a “peculiar” text she received from him after making his acquaintance at a party.
“I definitely felt a little obligated to chat with him, because to me, he seemed a little awkward,” the student—identified as Holly—explained. “Kind of like you might expect for a PhD student who didn’t know anyone at the party and was maybe trying his best to kind of get out there and be social and make friends.”
The following day, Holly said she received a text from him, which she described as overly formal.
“Hey, I am pretty sure we spoke about hiking trips yesterday,” Bryan’s text from July 10, 2022 at 1:19 p.m., read, per Dateline. “I really enjoy that activity, so please let me know. Thanks!”
Elsewhere in the Dateline documentary, Kohberger’s browsing history was found to have included searches for Ted Bundy, Britney Spears’ song “Criminal,” and the term “University of Idaho Murders.”
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