She ordered the city of Moscow to black out portions of the
images that show any portion of the victims' bodies or the blood
immediately surrounding them.
But the judge said the public also has an interest in seeing
investigation records, and so other photos, videos and documents
connected to the case can be released, including videos showing
distraught friends of the victims on the morning their bodies
were found.
Kohberger was sentenced to life without parole in July for the
stabbing murders of Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, Madison
Mogen and Ethan Chapin at an off-campus rental home in Moscow,
Idaho.
Family members of two of the victims, Mogen and Chapin, had
asked the judge to keep parts of the crime scene photos and
videos hidden from public view, saying the images are invasive
and traumatizing.
The criminal case drew worldwide attention, and the Moscow
Police Department received hundreds of requests to release
investigatory records. Idaho law generally allows for the
sealing of investigation records to be lifted once a criminal
investigation is complete.
After Kohberger’s sentencing, the city of Moscow responded to
one such request for public records by releasing some of the
photos and videos taken by law enforcement at the crime scene,
blurring out the bodies of the killed students as well as the
faces of other victims and witnesses who talked to police
outside the home.
“There is little to be gained by the public in seeing the
decedents’ bodies, the blood soaked sheets, blood spatter or
other death-scene depictions,” Marshall wrote, and she noted
that those images have already caused the families “extreme
emotional distress.”
“The fact remains: the murder investigation and the criminal
case are closed,” Marshall wrote. “Releasing these records will
have minor effect upon those who continue to be perplexed by the
facts or fixated on unfounded conspiracies whereas it has and
will continue to have profound effect upon the decedents’ loved
ones.”
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights
reserved |
|