Ajudge will decide whether Bryan Kohberger will face the death penalty in his upcoming murder trial after the prosecution and defense debated the issue at a hearing on Thursday.
Kohberger, 29, is facing four counts of first-degree murder and one count of felony burglary. He is accused of fatally stabbing University of Idaho students Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin in an off-campus residence in 2022.
Kohberger could face the death penalty if convicted. The defense has objected to the state’s intention to seek the death penalty in a series of motions.
The prosecution and defense presented their arguments to District Judge Steven Hippler on Thursday. After listening to both sides, Hippler said he would take the matter under advisement and issue a ruling at a later date.
Anne Taylor, Kohberger’s lawyer, argued that sitting on death row for decades without knowledge of if or how he will be executed could induce anxiety.
“I don’t believe that our Constitution allows for us to move forward and make him sit on death row for years and years, and the way Idaho is doing it right now isn’t really working,” Taylor said. “It’s not a realistic option, I think, to have him sit on death row and say Idaho’s going to figure out how to kill you at some point in the future in a way that isn’t cruel and unusual and a violation of rights.”
Taylor noted that the primary method of execution in the state was lethal injection, but the state also approved use of the firing squad after experiencing difficulties obtaining the drugs needed to administer a lethal injection. She also argued that the firing squad has not been built yet.
The prosecution argued that there could be alternative methods of execution in the future.
“You don’t know decades from now what an alternative might be, maybe they’ll have a better argument decades from now on the method of execution because maybe there will be another method,” Deputy Attorney General Jeffery Nye said.
I realized I had never seen if there was much in the way of a motive, so I went searching to see if one had been uncovered.
I came across this:
The Sun
There is also this potential piece of evidence:
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Newsweek