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Suspect in 2022 US university killings to take plea deal

Suspect in 2022 US university killings to take plea deal

Straits Timesa day ago
Bryan Kohberger was arrested after investigators found his DNA on a knife sheath recovered at the crime scene. PHOTO: AFP
Suspect in 2022 US university killings to take plea deal
LOS ANGELES - A man charged with the murder of four students in the northwestern US state of Idaho is set to plead guilty this week to avoid the death penalty, a victim's family told AFP.
Bryan Kohberger, a 30-year-old former criminology student, was facing trial in August for the November 2022 stabbing deaths that rocked the small town of Moscow and made national headlines.
He is accused of slipping into the victims' home undetected at around 4am local time (6pm Singapore time) and stabbing four University of Idaho students to death while they slept.
The bodies of 21-year-olds Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen, and 20-year-olds Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin, were found hours later.
Kohberger's guilty plea is expected to be formalised during a hearing on July 2, and is intended to spare him from facing the death penalty, the Goncalves family said in a statement shared by their lawyer Shanon Gray.
'After more than two years, this is how it concludes with a secretive deal and a hurried effort to close the case without any input from the victims' families on the plea's details,' the family wrote.
The Goncalves family had demanded the death penalty, and successfully advocated for the passage of a new law in Idaho which allows death row inmates to be executed by firing squad.
On a Facebook page, the Goncalves family expressed bitter heartbreak, calling the prosecution's pending plea deal 'shocking and cruel' after years of waiting for the trial to begin.
'Bryan Kohberger facing life in prison means he would still get to speak, form relationships, and engage with the world. Meanwhile, our loved ones have been silenced forever. That reality stings more deeply when it feels like the system is protecting his future more than honoring the victims' pasts,' the family said on social media.
Two and a half years since the murders, prosecutors have still yet to present any motive for the killings, while Kohberger has consistently remained silent throughout proceedings.
Kohberger was arrested and charged after investigators found his DNA on a knife sheath recovered at the crime scene.
A video shows a car similar to Kohberger's driving in the victims' neighborhood around the time of the murders.
Kohberger was studying for his PhD in criminology at Washington State University, about 15km away from Moscow, across the state border. AFP
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Two contrasting cases raise questions of Pope Leo's actions on sex abuse
Two contrasting cases raise questions of Pope Leo's actions on sex abuse

Straits Times

time3 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Two contrasting cases raise questions of Pope Leo's actions on sex abuse

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Our Lady of Reconciliation, a parish once run by Sodalitium Christianae Vitae, in Lima, Peru. CHICLAYO, Peru – The contrasts are glaring. In one case, Pope Leo XIV – then known as Bishop Robert Prevost – sided with victims of sexual abuse, locking horns with powerful Catholic figures in Peru. He sought justice for victims of a cult-like Catholic movement that recruited the children of elite families and used sexual and psychological abuse to subordinate members. In another case, he was accused of failing to sufficiently investigate claims by three women that they had been abused as children by priests. The accused were two priests in cardinal Prevost's diocese in a small Peruvian city, including one who had worked closely with the bishop, according to two people who work for the church. 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As he rose through the Vatican's ranks, cardinal Prevost kept increasing the pressure on Sodalitium, which was ordered to disband only weeks before he became the first American to lead the Catholic Church. In the second case, in the northern Peruvian city of Chiclayo, the three women and victims' advocates say, cardinal Prevost conducted a superficial investigation that led the Vatican to close the case relatively quickly. They also say that despite a church order prohibiting one of the accused priests, the Reverend Eleuterio Vásquez, from practicing amid the inquiry, he continued leading public Masses. Photographs and video posted on Facebook and verified by The New York Times showed Reverend Vásquez leading church ceremonies during the investigation, raising questions among some critics about what oversight, if any, Cardinal Prevost put in place to ensure that victims were protected from a potential abuser. 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One of the women, Ms Ana María Quispe, now 29, has since spoken out extensively on TikTok and Facebook and in Peruvian media, and said she had decided to go to Cardinal Prevost because she was haunted by the idea that her silence might have let an abuser continue to do harm. 'This could happen to my daughter,' she said on TikTok. 'I can't stay quiet – no more cowardice.' Ms Quispe said on TikTok that Cardinal Prevost told the women he believed them and even encouraged them to report the abuse to civil authorities, which they did. But then, Ms Quispe said, not much seemed to happen. The diocese claimed in public statements that Reverend Vásquez had been 'prohibited' from celebrating Mass amid an investigation. Social media posts reviewed by the Times, however, showed him continuing to participate publicly in Mass at least three times during the period the Vatican said an inquiry was being conducted. He was even photographed jointly officiating Mass with Cardinal Prevost. 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Property agent gets disturbing sex proposal in mail, files police report
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Independent Singapore

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  • Independent Singapore

Property agent gets disturbing sex proposal in mail, files police report

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Man leans back to narrowly escape gunman in shooting outside Penang school
Man leans back to narrowly escape gunman in shooting outside Penang school

Straits Times

time3 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Man leans back to narrowly escape gunman in shooting outside Penang school

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