Idaho
Deadline to reinstate Idaho Primary is looming

BOISE, Idaho — October 1 is the deadline for the Idaho GOP to notify the national party on how they’ll select delegates for the 2024 presidential election.
For the previous two presidential elections, the GOP has used the Primary System, but in the last legislative session, they accidentally removed it.
This happened while they were trying to switch the Primary Election from March to May. Now there are calls to reinstate it before this weekend’s deadline.
RELATED | Idaho GOP to hold caucus instead of presidential primary, unless legislature holds special session
There are petitions for the two separate primaries, one in March and one in May. Supporters of a March date say it will give Idahoans more of a say in the National Primary. The other side says a May Primary date better aligns with other local elections.
If neither of those happens, a caucus will be required in its place.
“It’s going to be a pretty efficient process, and the Democrats are telling me they are planning the same thing,” Said Senator Scott Herndon from Sagle.
A caucus is a party-run event where party members would vote for the candidate they want.
The last time the party had a caucus for the presidential election was 2012.
Herndon says people who participated in the last caucus might remember it taking a long time because the party had multiple rounds of voting.
“So we’re specifically not going to do that this time,” Herndon said. “The Republican party is calling this a firehouse caucus – you’re in you’re out.”
Herndon says the party will need to communicate to Republican voters well ahead of the primary, so they are aware of the change.

Idaho
Bryan Kohberger asks Idaho judge to block ‘bushy' brows evidence, suggests witness’s artwork skews memory

Bryan Kohberger’s defense team is asking the judge overseeing his quadruple murder trial to block an eyewitness from testifying about the intruder she saw having “bushy eyebrows” on the night three of her housemates and another friend were killed in a 4 a.m. massacre.
First, the defense argues that allowing the witness, identified in court filings as “DM,” would be unfair, too vague and unfairly prejudicial before the jury. Also in the motion, attorney Elisa Massoth denies that the defendant, Kohberger, has bushy eyebrows.
She is also seeking an order barring any evidence related to “bushy eyebrows” in addition to keeping DM from using the phrase. In separate filings, the defense is also asking the court to limit the use of the words murder, psychopath and sociopath.
The surviving housemate is the only known witness to have encountered the intruder and lived to tell her tale after she froze in shock, and he walked toward a back sliding door – and recently unsealed text messages so she tried in vain to reach her murdered friends minutes after the intruder left.
BRYAN KOHBERGER DOESN’T WANT AMAZON SHOPPING LIST REVEALED AT TRIAL
Brian Kohberger pictured after his transfer to the Ada County jail in Boise, Idaho. (Ada County Sheriff’s Office)
The motion became public after Judge Steven Hippler told defense attorneys and prosecutors they were keeping too many court filings out of public view, filing them under seal without proper justification.
Massoth wrote that DM was unable to describe the masked intruder to a sketch artist and did not know what color eyebrows the intruder had. The texts, at least the exceprts that have been made public, show she discussed the intruder’s mask covering his mouth and forehead. They do not mention his eyebrows.
“Eyewitness identifications are inherently unreliable,” said Edwina Elcox, a Boise-based defense attorney who formerly represented Lori Vallow. “Especially this one – it’s beyond vague.”
IDAHO POLICE RECOVERED A 3-PERSON MIXTURE OF DNA UNDER MADDIE MOGEN’S FINGERNAILS

Madison Mogen, top left, smiles on the shoulders of her best friend, Kaylee Goncalves, as they pose with Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and two other housemates in Goncalves’ final Instagram post, shared the day before the four students were stabbed to death. (@kayleegoncalves/Instagram)
But what stands out to her in this case is the revelation in court filings that DM had a wall of photos and artwork, some of which she had drawn herself, depicting detailed faces and prominent eyebrows.
Last month, defense attorneys tried to attack the housemate’s credibility, arguing her story changed in the span of three interviews with investigators and that she admitted she had been drinking, felt tired and her memory was hazy.
“There is a beyond strong explanation, when somebody is so unsure about why they may have this distinctive impression of eyebrows – because it’s all over the room,” Elcox told Fox News Digital. “It’s artwork that they’re drawing.”
Read the motion
The defense argued that this artwork could have influenced her memory.
“There is no reliability of the physical characteristics that D.M. has reported,” Massoth wrote. “Mr. Kohberger does not have bushy eyebrows, but the art work on D.M.’s wall and that which she draws eyes with eyebrows could be described as bushy, full, or prominent.”
Hippler previously said the witness’s statements could be “fodder” for cross-examination at trial but had no bearing on the finding of probable cause used to justify Kohberger’s arrest.
Elcox says she expects explosive cross-examination on this issue.

Bryan Christopher Kohberger as he appeared on the Washington State University website. He was studying there for a Ph.D. in criminology at the time of the murders 10 miles away at the University of Idaho. (Washington State University)
“People often accused defense attorneys of just like throwing spaghetti at the wall and hoping something sticks, like questioning an identification,” she said. “But that is some real meat and potatoes, about how to how to question the reliability of whatever was observed. I can’t imagine a more specific fact.”
The new filing also reveals DM had “lucid dreams of being kidnapped or chased,” she was a consumer of true-crime TV and podcasts.
“I think the judge will allow it on the grounds that DM will be subject to cross-examination and that the unreliability of the identification goes to the weight that the jury will give the description, not the admissibility of it,” Elcox, who has been closely following the case, told Fox News Digital. “But … this identification can absolutely be destroyed on cross-examination.”
Judge Hippler previously said DM’s testimony appeared more useful in establishing a timeline of the slayings than identifying the attacker.
According to a probable cause affidavit, DM overheard someone saying, “There’s someone here” after 4 a.m. She later heard what sounded like crying, and a male voice saying, “It’s OK, I’m going to help you.”
BRYAN KOHBERGER’S DEFENSE CLAIMS HE HAS AUTISM IN BID TO AVOID FIRING SQUAD

Bryan Kohberger enters the courtroom for a hearing at the Latah County Courthouse in Moscow, Idaho, June 27, 2023. (August Frank/Pool via Reuters)
A security camera at the home next door picked up “distorted audio” of what investigators believe were “voices or a whimper followed by a loud thud,” in addition to a dog’s barking at 4:17 a.m.
DM looked out her bedroom door and “saw a figure clad in black clothing and a mask that covered the person’s mouth and nose walking towards her,” according to the affidavit. She described him to police as over 5 feet, 10 inches tall, athletic but not muscular and having bushy eyebrows.
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Bryan Kohberger arrives at the Monroe County Courthouse in Pennsylvania after police arrested him at his parents’ house in Albrightsville in the quadruple homicide in Moscow, Idaho. (The Image Direct for Fox News Digital)
They came face-to-face, and she froze in shock after he passed within three feet of her, according to the new filing.
Minutes later, she called three of the victims – Madison Mogen, 21, Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20. No one answered. Then she reached out to the other surviving roommate, “BF.”
Although it was believed DM locked her bedroom door and went to sleep after this encounter, the new filing reveals that after a brief exchange of texts with her roommate, BF urged her to “run” downstairs.
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According to other court filings released this week, DM spent the night in BF’s room and an unnamed person called 911 from BF’s phone around noon the next day.
At 10:23 a.m., DM texted both Mogen and Goncalves. “Pls answer,” she wrote. “R u up??” She then called her father around 11:40 a.m., and finally someone called 911 from BF’s phone around noon.
Timeline of Nov. 13, 2022:
- 4:00 AM: Suspect arrives at house
- Between 4 and 4:17: Time of murders
- 4:19: Roommate calls 3 victims, no one answers
- 4:22 to 4:24: Surviving roommates text each other from inside house
- 4:27: Roommate calls victims again, no one answers
- 4:32: Roommate texts Goncalves ‘Pls answer’
- 10:23: Surviving roommate texts victims, no one answers
- 11:39: Roommate calls her father
- 12:00 PM.: 911 call placed from roommate’s phone
Court documents revealed last month that DM also said the intruder may have been carrying a vacuum-like object. She did not recognize him at the time of the attack and did not recognize an unmasked photo of Kohberger after his arrest.
Kohberger, 30, is accused of killing four of the six people inside a home on King Road in Moscow, Idaho, around 4 a.m. Nov. 13, 2022. The fourth victim was Ethan Chapin, 20.
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Brian Kohberger in Latah County court for his Jan. 5, 2023, initial appearance in an Idaho courtroom. (Pool)
Police arrested Kohberger Dec. 30 of that year at his parents’ house in Pennsylvania.
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He faces a first-degree murder charge for each victim and a single felony burglary charge. A judge entered not guilty pleas on his behalf to all charges.
The trial is scheduled to begin Aug. 11. He could face the death penalty if convicted.
Idaho
Obituary for Francis Earl Priest at Eckersell Funeral Home

Idaho
911 call and texts from surviving roommates in Idaho college murders released

Text messages and call records between the two roommates who were home and survived the quadruple slaying of four college students in Moscow, Idaho, were released March 6, revealing more about what happened on the night of Nov. 13, 2022.
The texts and calls show the surviving roommates, Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke, had reached out to the four victims: Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin, though their texts and calls went unanswered, according to court documents obtained by NBC News.
“No one is answering,” Mortensen texted Funke around 4:20 a.m. “I’m rlly confused rn.”
The roommates, identified only by their initials in the court documents, also described seeing someone in a “ski mask.”
“I’m not kidding am so freaked out,” Mortensen said, before she said her phone was about to die.
“So am I,” Funke replied. “Come to my room. Run. Down here.”
The texts and calls were released in a motion from prosecutors who argue that the messages are not hearsay and should be included as evidence in the trial of Bryan Kohberger, who has been charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary.
A judge entered a not guilty plea on Kohberger’s behalf in 2023.
Kohberger was arrested in Pennsylvania about nearly seven weeks after the bodies of Mogen, Goncalves, Kernodle and Chapin were found in an off-campus home near the University of Idaho in 2022.
A person identified only by their initials “H.J.” first found the “unresponsive body of Xana Kernodle,” and then told Mortensen and Funke to call 911, according to court documents.
“Something happened in our house. We don’t know what,” the 911 caller said, according to a transcript of the call.
The dispatcher asked for the caller to tell them exactly what was going on.
“One of the roommates who’s passed out and she was drunk last night and she’s not waking up,” the caller said. “Oh, and they saw some man in their house last night.”
Mortensen testified before a grand jury that she heard noises and saw an unknown male in the residence, according to the motion.
Mortensen also texted Goncalves and Mogen around 10:23 a.m., asking them if they were awake and for Goncalves to “pls answer,” according to the motion.
Officials have said the 911 call was placed around 11:58 a.m., and that the killings took place around 4 a.m.
Goncalves’ family reacted to the release of the motions in a Facebook post on March 7.
“Reading some of the transcripts/documents that have recently been released, has been exceptionally hard. We need this to be over,” the Goncalves family said.
Kohberger is being held without bond in jail in Ada County, Idaho with a trial date has been set for Aug. 11, 2025.
The trial venue, which was initially in Latah County, moved to Ada County after the Idaho Supreme Court grated the defense’s request for the trial to be moved to Boise, Idaho, over arguments that Kohberger may not be able to get a fair trial where the slayings occurred.
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