Concerns Mount Over Kohberger’s Behavior Towards Female Students: Professors Reported Alarm

Concerns Mount Over Kohberger’s Behavior Towards Female Students: Professors Reported Alarm

Concerns Mount Over Kohberger’s Behavior Towards Female Students: Professors Reported Alarm
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In a disturbing twist of fate, convicted murderer Bryan Kohberger—recently sentenced to life for the heinous killings of four University of Idaho students—had already sparked alarm among his peers prior to these tragic events. Newly released police documents unveil that Kohberger’s treatment of fellow classmates became a topic of grave concern.

At the heart of this escalating worry lies Kohberger's time as a Ph.D. student at Washington State University (WSU), where he allegedly "offended" multiple female students, prompting two of his professors to consider a drastic step: staging an intervention. This was no trivial matter; it spoke volumes regarding faculty apprehension about his behavior. Judging by the briefing, one professor conveyed in a text, *“We need to do an intervention with [Kohberger]. She is going to try to gather information, but apparently he’s offended several of our female students…”* Such warnings revealed that Kohberger’s interactions were deemed significant enough to warrant intervention.

The position of the WSU police chief, Gary Jenkins, further illuminates a foreboding shadow over Kohberger's college life. He recalled distressing reports of a female student who claimed Kohberger had followed her to her car—a subtle yet troubling display that raised red flags. This alarming pattern continued at WSU as reports suggested that his discomforting behavior was practically an open secret among the student body.

Prior to his unsettling tenure at WSU, Kohberger had completed a master’s degree in criminal justice at DeSales University in Pennsylvania. A former classmate, Brittany Slaven, recollected that his academic interests, particularly an eerie fascination with the case

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