Bryan Kohberger judge lifts gag order
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What Bryan Kohberger's prison will look likeBryan Kohberger could spend the rest of his life in the Idaho ... without the opportunity for parole. Conditions in the prison were reported by the Idaho Statesman last year to include feces on some walls, delays in access to medical care, "cages" for ...
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Prison experts discuss how Bryan Kohberger's admission to the Idaho student murders might make him vulnerable in prison, where inmates serving life sentences have nothing to lose.
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The Western Journal on MSNKohberger Set to Die in Hellish Prison Known for Violence, Hunger Strikes, 'Biohazard' HVACA man who killed four University of Idaho students in 2022 is likely to be housed in the most notorious prison in America, known for its violence, hunger strikes, "biohazard" HVAC, and feces-smeared cages.
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Bryan Kohberger and his defense attorneys insisted on his innocence in the fatal stabbings of four University of Idaho students in their off-campus home.
Bryan Kohberger has accepted a plea deal that keeps him from going to trial or getting the death penalty. We should pay attention to the outrage.
Members of Florida’s legislature have been invited to “Alligator Alcatraz,” the controversial immigration detention facility in the Everglades, this weekend. NBC New Reporter at WTVJ, Hatzel Vela reports the latest.
Steve Goncalves is unhappy with Bryan Kohberger's plea deal that spares him the death penalty.
The Kohberger case still has a lot of loose ends — and the plea deal means the public probably won’t get closure.
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Bryan Kohberger appeared expressionless as a judge asked if he murdered four Idaho college students in their off-campus home, answering “yes” to each name called out in the courtroom Wednesday.
Kohberger avoided the death penalty, but is set to serve time in a maximum security prison known for reported internal violence and poor conditions.
The judge lifted the gag order days before Kohberger's July 23 sentencing. Police are breaking their silence in the University of Idaho murder case hours after Judge Steven Hippler lifted the nondissemination order,