In a shocking turn of events, Brian
Cobberger,
the man accused of savagely
killing four University of Idaho
students in cold blood, has just decided
to plead guilty after a threeyear legal
saga right on the eve of trial. Why do
this now? And especially after he tried
to point the finger at others. We’re
going to break it down. Welcome to
Sidebar, presented by Law and Crime. I’m
Jesse Weber.
Brian Coberger plans to plead guilty.
That is a shocking headline that was
first reported by News Nation. Came out
Monday night. Still reeling from this,
trying to understand why. Now, I think
there is an important legal
consideration, an important legal
reason, something that just happened
that may have influenced this decision.
But I mean, for us here on Sidebar,
anybody who’s been following our show
for the past what, 3 years, we were
covering this case even before we knew
about Brian Cobberger, we were covering
this when the killings happened. And
there was that whole six week search for
the killer before his arrest. And when I
say killings, you know what I’m talking
about, right? The brutal stabbing deaths
of four University of Idaho students at
this off-campus rental home. 21-year-old
Madison Mogan, 21-year-old Kaylee
Gonzalez, 20-year-old Xanakodal, and
20-year-old Ethan Chapen. This was back
on November 13th, 2022. Now, 30-year-old
Brian Coberger, who was arrested the
following month, a former criminology
student at Washington State University,
he has been facing four counts of murder
and burglary. And now, it was announced
on the eve of his criminal trial about
to begin in August. August 4th was jury
selection. August 18th opening
statements, he intends to plead guilty
as per a plea deal with the prosecution
in Moscow. And as part of that deal, the
idea would be that he would be sentenced
to life in prison without the
possibility of parole, but the death
penalty would be taken off the table.
He’ll also reportedly wave his right to
an appeal. Now, as reported by the Idaho
Statesman, according to a letter that
was sent to a victim’s family, Leak
County prosecuting attorney Bill
Thompson said, “We cannot fathom the
toll that this case has taken on your
family, and this resolution is our
sincere attempt to seek justice for your
family. This agreement ensures that the
defendant will be convicted, will spend
the rest of his life in prison, and will
not be able to put you and the other
families through the uncertainty of
decades of postconviction appeals.”
Here’s the problem with that. It appears
that some of the families don’t want
this. In a Facebook statement, the
family of Kaylee Gonzalez said, “It’s
true. We are beyond furious at the state
of Idaho. They have failed us. Please
give us some time. This was very
unexpected. We appreciate all your love
and support. #heartbroken
#kayjadeforever.”
Now, in a follow-up statement, the
family said the following. The death
penalty is merely an illusion in the
criminal justice system. When available,
it serves as a bargaining tool for the
state, and when rarely applied, it’s
never enforced due to a highly
inefficient appellet process. The notion
that someone can plead guilty to a crime
and still face years of appellet delays
reveals a systemic failure. The Lat
County Prosecutor’s Office treatment of
our family during this process is
something I wouldn’t wish on anyone. We
questioned decisions early in the
investigation. Why was the mayor
commenting on the case? Why was the
coroner speaking to families? Why was an
officer with less than two years
experience leading the investigation?
Why was the University of Idaho involved
when they declared it an isolated
off-campus incident? Why was the
university permitted to write a book
about the incident while others were
silenced under an overly broad order? As
a result, we were branded adversaries.
So, it was no shock how the Lat County
prosecutor’s office mishandled the plea
deal. They vaguely mentioned a possible
plea on Friday without seeking our input
and presented the plea on Sunday. Lat
County should be ashamed of its
prosecutor’s office. Four wonderful
young people lost their lives. Yet, the
victim’s families were treated as
opponents from the outset. We weren’t
even called about the plea. We received
an email with a letter attached. That’s
how Lat County’s prosecutor’s office
treats murder victims families. Adding
insult to injury, they’re rushing the
plea, giving families just one day to
coordinate and appear at the courthouse
for a plea on July 2nd. Who do they
think they are? 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 victim’s families on the police
details. Our family is frustrated right
now and that will subside and we will
come together as always and deal with
the reality that we face moving forward.
Once again, we thank everyone for their
thoughts and prayers. Now, according to
TMZ, Zanzant Kim Kernodal is furious.
wanted Coberg to face a jury despite the
prosecution allegedly telling them that
this spares the families having to see
gruesome crime scene photos. Kim
responded, “We know the graphics. They
were not trying to spare us.” She claims
when prosecutors informed them of the
deal, they didn’t mention removing the
death penalty. Hey everybody, this is
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to see if you qualify.
So, now we have this hearing that’s
scheduled Wednesday. It is expected
Brian Coberger will change his plea to
guilty. This is a hearing that is
required under Idaho law. So, why do
this? Why do this now? For that, let me
bring on somebody who’s been following
the case from the very beginning. I’m
joined by trial attorney friend of the
show, Rich Showenstein. Rich, good to
see you. Thanks for taking the time.
Happy to be here, Jesse.
Reaction?
Well, I I’m shocked like everybody else.
I didn’t see this coming. Everything we
heard about this case was that Brian
Coberger was going to deny guilt and
that the state of Idaho was going to
vigorously pursue this prosecution. So,
I I didn’t know this was coming. I
didn’t have any preview and I was very
surprised that it happened.
What is your
reaction to the family’s reaction? I
mean, the Gonzalez family attorney,
Shannon Gray, told CNN the issue is
they’re trying to cram the plea for July
2nd only gives the families a day to get
to Boise. That’s, you know, aside from
the scheduling of it, the lack of
information, the lack of input. Does
that seem typical to you?
Well, I have concerns about what we’ve
heard, but also I think I’m right here.
We’ve only heard from two of the four
families. And one of the complicating
factors in this is that there are four
families that would have to be
separately consulted and that might not
all be of the same opinion. So, I I am
concerned about what I’ve heard. If the
families weren’t consulted or they
weren’t given very much time in the
course of being consulted or they
haven’t been listened to at all, I would
be concerned about that. Um, but I sort
of suspect that’s not really the case.
Uh, I I assume there was some
consultation here. I assume there’s been
ongoing discussions with these families.
I would have to know more about that
back and forth to really have an opinion
about it
if there was. So, you know, we
don’t really know the specifics of what
was said and what wasn’t, but if the
family or families really do not want
this to happen under Idaho law, I don’t
know if you know this, could the court
reject the plea? Could the court
generally reject the plea if the family
say we do not want this? war. At the end
of the day, if the defendant is choosing
to plead guilty and the prosecution is
accepting that, did the families really
not have any input?
So, I don’t know the specifics about
Idaho law on this point. But as a
general matter, I would say that if you
have prosecutors who have negotiated a
deal and a defendant who is going to
take the deal and the deal appears
somewhat reasonable and he’s agreeing to
life in prison without the possibility
of parole, the court’s not going to deny
that deal. The court is going to approve
that deal even if some of the families
disagree. I mean, the court can’t make
the prosecutors seek the death penalty,
which is basically the option here. So,
I think at the end of the day, the court
will approve this deal one way or the
other.
I am curious at this hearing,
which we plan to cover, by the way, on
law and crime. We’re going to try to do
live coverage. I’m curious if the family
makes a statement if they try to
persuade the judge not to agree to this
in some way.
Yeah, I would I well, it sounds like at
least one or two of the families are
pretty vocal, so I expect they would try
to be heard at this hearing and would
try to be heard publicly. So, I think
that will be interesting. And I I feel
really bad for the families. You know,
you want them to have some level of
catharsis here. You want them to get
some solace out of the conclusion of
these criminal proceedings. And it’s one
thing not to like the result that may or
may not happen, but to be so troubled by
the process, I really feel bad for those
families.
I want to go through maybe the
legal reasons why this is happening.
Okay. So, it was reported just days ago
before this plea deal, just days ago
that the judge overseeing this case,
Steven Hiper, who’s going to be, you
know, ultimately deciding whether to
accept this deal, barred the defense,
prevented the defense from moving
forward with a quote alternate
perpetrator defense, meaning someone
else did it. So apparently, while the
defense intended to point the finger at
four alternative suspects, their
identity is unknown because there are
sealed documents. Although USA Today
reports that there were three who were
quote socially connected to one or more
of the victims, while the other had a
quote passing connection, the judge
wasn’t convinced. The judge wasn’t
convinced there was anything to back
this up, saying quote the evidence is
entirely irrelevant, citing a lack of
motive or even means to carry out the
killings. Hitler writing in his
decision, “They have each cooperated
with law enforcement, providing DNA
samples, fingerprints, and allowing
searches as requested. Notably, lab
testing has excluded their DNA from
samples taken from the crime scene and
victims.” And he went on to say, “It is
not sufficient for a defendant to merely
offer up unsupported speculation that
another person may have committed the
crime, which is all defendant has done
here, and that this would quote lead the
jury astray.” Rich, I wonder I got to
believe the fact that they weren’t given
this option, this defense, may have
played a role in his decision to
ultimately plead guilty.
Sure, I bet it
did. When you think about it, the
primary reason a defendant would agree
to this deal is that he doesn’t believe
he has a chance of victory at trial. Uh
the evidence is overwhelming against
him. I mean, from what I’ve heard, it’s
very compelling. He doesn’t have a
defense. He doesn’t have an alibi. He’s
not the court’s not going to let him put
in this third party culprit kind of
defense. So he feels going into the
trial that he doesn’t have any chance of
success on guilt. And then he realizes
that if I’m found guilty, they’re going
to consider the death penalty and
they’re going to find aggravating
factors and I’m going to get sentenced
to death. That is the most likely
outcome if the trial goes forward.
Rich, I got to tell you, when I heard
this is the first thing that came to my
mind, assuming he did this, right? What
do I mean by that? Assuming he’s not a
guy who says, “I’m completely innocent,
but you know, I can’t get a fair shake
at this trial. I’m just, you know,
taking the best that I can. You know, I
I don’t want the death penalty. I’m I’m
pleading guilty to something I didn’t
do.” Assuming that’s not the case. Okay,
let’s assume he really did do this.
Okay, what a monster. What a monster for
a guy who’s admitting who’s going to
plead guilty. Okay, so if we’re assuming
he did this, he was trying to blame
other people 5 minutes ago. I’m sorry. I
know that you’re entitled to a defense,
but there’s something about that that
really, really gets me angry.
Yeah, I get that. I mean, he’s going to
go down as one of the great monsters in
US history. I mean, for somebody to come
in to the home of these college students
and do that to completely innocent
people for whatever warped crazy reasons
he did it. Um, it it really is
unspeakable evil and we’ve assumed from
the evidence that he probably did it.
He’s now going to admit guilt. Uh, his
name will live forever as an example of
evil.
And I also have to wonder one of
the reasons why that he might have pled
guilty. There was another legal
development, right? It was also the
judge recently, a few days ago, denied
the defense’s bid to delay the trial.
The argument was that they needed more
time for discovery. They also made the
argument that because of the extensive
media coverage of the case, including
this dine episode, it may have uh
created a prejuditial effect,
particularly on a jury. But Judge Hipler
wrote in an order, quote, “Defendant has
not made showing that there is good
cause to continue the trial or that his
substantial rights will be prejudiced by
proceeding to trial as scheduled.” And
he also added, “The longer the public is
made to sit and wait for the facts to
come out at trial, the more time there
is for inflammatory speculative stories,
movies, and books to circulate, and more
time for prior ones to be rebroadcast,
purchased, viewed, and consumed by the
public. proceeding with trials scheduled
will likely avoid negative consequences
from future publicity. Rich, again, it
seems to me that had a factor that that
must have had a factor as well,
right? I
think the people keep asking, well, why
did this happen now? And and the reason
is that the trial was approaching
quickly and it’s not unusual for all
basically all kinds of court cases get
into settlement discussions on the eve
of trial, both criminal and civil cases.
And so with trial approaching here and
rulings not going in his favor and the
evidence stacked against him, it might
have been a moment where he realized,
I’m just going to have to plead guilty
to save my life because going through
with this trial isn’t going to work and
delaying this trial isn’t going to work
either.
And in my legal opinion, they
had him dead to rights. Okay, look, he’s
he was innocent until proven guilty. But
what did they have? Prosecutors alleged
that Coberger’s DNA was found on a KBAR
knife sheath that was left at the crime
scene. Cell phone records allegedly
placed him near the victim’s home before
the killings. More particularly for
reporting from Fox News and East Idaho
News. We’re talking cell phone data that
demonstrates or arguably demonstrates
that Cobberger’s phone pinged almost a
dozen times near a tower that provides
coverage within feet of the crime scene.
Surveillance footage apparently shows a
white Hyundai Elantre matching
Cobberger’s car speeding away afterward.
It was in that area multiple times to,
according to the government, a potential
eyewitness ID from a surviving roommate.
Court documents indicate the roommate
described the intruder as quote not very
muscular, but athletically built with
bushy eyebrows. And we did this whole
separate sidebar on this as well where
there’s this apparently or maybe a
mysterious other witness, potential Door
Dash delivery driver who allegedly saw
Coberger at the crime scene. Internet
searches allegedly from Cobberger’s
phone about Ted Bundy, the Moscow
killings, pornography. So again, what
was the defense going to be, Rich? He
was driving around late at night. You
know, it was reported that the judge was
going to allow the defense to call
several people. One was apparently a
friend of Coers in high school. Another
was potentially Coberger’s boxing coach,
a guy who owns the dealership where
Cobberger’s parents bought the Hyundai
Elantre. But when you look at that
mountain of evidence, and I’ve been
using that phrase from the very
beginning, a mountain of evidence, it
became very difficult for the defense to
argue against it.
Yeah, I I think it was overwhelming. But
also, you know, Jesse, we can talk for a
minute if you want about why the state
of Idaho would do this. I I know the
evidence seemed overwhelming against
him, but at the end of the day, there’s
a jury of 12 people, and they all have
to be convinced beyond a reasonable
doubt that the government has proved
guilt. And so for the government,
there’s always a chance that somebody on
that jury doesn’t feel like they can
convict this person. And so for them to
get a guilty plea, first of all, it gets
rid of the cost and effort of doing this
trial. And it gets certainty
because
it’s expensive. It’s expensive. It’s not
a trial. It’s it’s also a death penalty
trial.
Right. Exactly. Right. And it’s
not just a trial. In these kind of
cases, it’s years and years of appeals
and habius petitions and fights about
the death penalty. And you avoid all of
that. You avoid the public spectacle.
You avoid shining a light on these
innocent college students that were
murdered in their home. You avoid the
circus atmosphere. You avoid all of it.
and you put this monster in jail for the
rest of his life. And I do feel bad if
one or more of the families are unhappy
with that outcome. But I got to tell
you, that is a good outcome from the
prosecution’s point of view. Life in
prison without the chance of parole, not
having to do a trial, not going through
years and years of appeals, that is a
good outcome for the state of Idaho. And
look, the jury a jury would be spared
from seeing these photos. Even though
the family said that they’ve already
seen everything and they’ve already seen
the graphics, they too were spared from
seeing it. Um, you also talk about the
fact that the surviving maybe the
surviving roommate doesn’t have to
testify and recount what she saw because
she became a a point of conversation as
well. Um, and you know there this trial
would be difficult for a number of
different reasons. Having said that, you
can’t put aside the how the family feels
and what they wanted and what they saw
as justice. I guess my question is about
this now. Are we ever going to find out
what really happened here? You know, one
of the interests that people had about
this trial was it wasn’t necessarily was
he going to be found guilty or not? I
think a lot of people felt that he was
going to be found guilty. The question
was, is any information going to come
out, Rich, about why he did this, his
motive, any kind of the why? And now
that he is going to be potentially
pleading guilty, I don’t think by law he
has to like there’s a mandatory like
it’s mandatory that he provide a
statement about why he did it. He
doesn’t have to do that. Um, there’s an
Idaho criminal rule 33 that says before
imposing sentence, the court must give
counsel an opportunity to speak on
behalf of the defendant and must ask the
defendant personally if the defendant
wishes to make a statement and to
present, you know, any information in
mitigation of punishment. But are we
going to find out any information uh
from Brian Cobberger? Are we going to
find out any information from the
prosecution? Now, you tell me.
So, he’s not going to be required to
make a statement. And I’ve never seen
that in this kind of plea deal to
explain himself and say why he committed
the crime. I don’t think that’s going to
be required of him. He might get the
opportunity to do it. He might get the
opportunity to make a statement or he
can make a statement from jail. I mean,
he can be interviewed. He can provide
information if he wants, but he’s not
going to be obligated to. And we may
never know really what the story was. Uh
the prosecution has evidence. They may
be able to release some of that
following the guilty plea, following the
conclusion of the proceeding. Maybe
we’ll get a little more of the evidence
that we would have seen in trial. You
might get some more information, but are
we ever going to really know? I mean, I
I don’t think it’s knowable how somebody
could do uh something like this. I I’ll
never get a satisfactory answer. I I’m
hoping because if they remove the gag
order because so much of this has been
in secret. I if we know, you know, what
his activity was leading up the months,
the weeks leading up to this, what was
his search history? Was he what was his
connection? The stranger coming into the
house in the middle of the night is what
makes this particularly chilling and
eerie. And that’s the part that’s very
hard to grasp. Um, and that’s the part
that I’m hoping everybody gets a little
bit more information, particularly the
families. the families need more
information than anybody else. Now, one
thing I wanted to ask you about is uh
ABC News is reporting that the state
will also seek restitution for the
victims and their families. This is
according to the plea agreement. What
does that look like exactly?
Well, I mean, it’s usually some sort of
financial provision by the defendant. I
don’t know. I I have no information
about his financial wherewithal. I don’t
know what his assets are like. Um, but
if he has any assets, they could be
significantly depleted in favor of the
families. I’m sure that’s not really
solace to them either.
No. The uh
University of Idaho released a
statement, too. We keep the families of
the victims in our hearts as each deals
with this outcome in their own way. No
outcome can replace what they lost. We
will never forget the four incredible
lives taken. Rich Shoenstein, thank you
so much. Appreciate you taking the time,
sir.
Glad to be here. Happy fourth. And
that’s all we have for you right now
here on Sidebar. Everybody, thank you so
much for joining us. And as always,
please subscribe on YouTube, Apple
Podcast, Spotify, wherever you should
get your podcasts. I’m Jesse Weber. I’ll
speak to you next time.
[Music]
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