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Kohberger case leaks: What happens to Idaho’s special investigation? – East Idaho News

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Kohberger case leaks: What happens to Idaho’s special investigation? – East Idaho News


BOISE (Idaho Statesman) — A controversial episode of NBC’s “Dateline” about the Bryan Kohberger student murder case, aired just before his planned trial, remains at the center of a court-ordered special investigation into suspected leaks even after the killer pleaded guilty and is serving life in prison.

The defense requested the investigation in June, with prosecutors filing a motion in response the same day, according to a case summary records log. Both documents were filed under seal, so not released to the public, and followed encouragement from the judge presiding over the case to investigate likely violations of the court’s gag order.

Fourth Judicial District Judge Steven Hippler said at a public hearing in May that he was open to appointing a special prosecutor over the alleged violations. The request would include the ability to ask for a magistrate inquiry to obtain subpoena power, Hippler said.

After Hippler lifted the gag order and Kohberger, 30, was sentenced to consecutive life terms for killing four University of Idaho students, lead case prosecutor Bill Thompson and former Moscow Police Chief James Fry confirmed in interviews with the Idaho Statesman existence of the special investigation into the evidence leaks. In the two-hour episode, “Dateline” cited sources close to the Kohberger investigation and revealed previously undisclosed details — some true, others not, a lead investigator in the Kohberger case also told the Statesman.

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RELATED | Police documents released after Bryan Kohberger’s sentencing detail strange happenings weeks before

Thompson and Fry both said they supported efforts to discover the source — or sources — of the case information in hopes of seeing them prosecuted. That inquiry is ongoing even after prosecutors closed the case into the murders of U of I students Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin, Thompson said.

“There is a special prosecutor, and I can tell you that we are not included or privy to what the investigation is doing, nor is the defense, is my understanding, nor is Judge Hippler,” Thompson told the Statesman by phone. “It’s being overseen completely independently, and whatever the investigation is doing is confidential. That’s what we were instructed by the judge.”

Unless charges are eventually filed and someone prosecuted for suspected violations of the gag order, the public is not entitled to information about such sealed legal proceedings, Idaho courts spokesperson Nate Poppino told the Statesman.

Hippler indicated he believed the perceived leaks came from members of law enforcement, which fell under the prosecution’s responsibility not to violate the gag order, which prohibited statements about the case outside of court. But the judge walked back that suggestion in his order that denied the defense’s request to delay Kohberger’s trial.

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It could have just as easily come from someone affiliated with Kohberger’s attorneys, Hippler wrote.

That would include dozens of experts hired to assist in his defense. “I’m having a hard time thinking that it was one of the investigators or somebody in my office who had access to all that material,” Thompson said. “I guess anything is possible, and, if nothing else, I’m hoping that the investigation will be able to shed light on either eliminating or inculpating whoever is responsible.”

Fry rebuked “Dateline” and called the decision to air the Kohberger case episode “unprofessional.” He raised concerns that disclosing previously unknown evidence on television could have changed the outcome of the case.

“No. 1, it should have never got into their hands, so somebody obviously messed up there, or didn’t mess up and did it intentionally,” Fry said in an interview with the Statesman. “But I still would like to believe that if you’re a professional organization, you’d say, ‘We’re not going to take that chance’ — even for a click or even for viewing.”

RELATED | From ‘you’re a joke’ to ‘I’ve forgiven you’: Families of Idaho murder victims address Bryan Kohberger at sentencing

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‘Dateline’ got some facts wrong, lead investigator says

The “Dateline” special, which NBC broadcast on May 9 — just seven weeks before jury selection was set to begin — included a raft of new details about Kohberger and the murder investigation. It remains available to watch on Peacock, NBC’s streaming platform.

Idaho State Police Lt. Darren Gilbertson, a lead investigator on the student murder case, told the Statesman that he watched the episode and “Dateline” got a few details right. But, he said, it also had some — including significant ones — wrong.

“There were some gross inaccuracies and just complete falsehoods,” Gilbertson said in a phone interview.

Idaho State Police detectives Lt. Darren Gilbertson, center, and Lt. Mike Mooney, left, worked the University of Idaho student murder case on King Road in Moscow in November 2022. Bryan Kohberger was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty last month. | Courtesy Idaho State Police

“Dateline” asserted in the episode that Kohberger’s target was Mogen. Investigators said they think Kohberger first went up to the third floor to attack Mogen and Goncalves — one of whom Thompson and Gilbertson said they believe was his intended target — but aren’t certain if one was targeted.

Kernodle then went up the stairs to the third floor and encountered Kohberger, “Dateline” reported. Gilbertson agreed, though perhaps she did not go all the way, he said, which was determined by what her second-floor roommate, Dylan Mortensen, heard and told police.

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Kohberger came down after Kernodle where she fought him in her second-floor bedroom, Gilbertson said. Recently released Moscow police reports stated Kernodle was stabbed more than 50 times, including defensive wounds.

Still unclear to investigators is whether Kohberger killed Kernodle or Chapin, her boyfriend who was asleep in her bed, first. Chapin died from a single wound to his neck that severed his jugular vein, police reports said, and also had wounds to the back of his lower hamstrings but those wounds were not “carved” as “Dateline” reported, Gilbertson said.

“There was a strike to the back of his leg,” he said. “None of us believe or concluded that there was any other purpose or that he was doing (something) ritualistic or anything like that. I think it was simply a strike to make sure that Ethan was not going to come after him.”

Also, Kohberger, after fatally stabbing the four students, did not take a seat in Kernodle’s bedroom out of exhaustion, as “Dateline” purported, he said.

“Completely false, made up, no idea where that came from,” Gilbertson said. “He did not sit down in a chair anywhere in the house.”

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In response to a request for comment from the Statesman, an NBC News spokesperson said the network stands by its reporting.

What the show did get right, Gilbertson said, was Kohberger had previously used his cellphone for online searches about notorious serial murderer Ted Bundy and his justifications for killing. The program also reported that he searched for pornography with the terms “sleeping,” “passed out” and “drugged.”

“All that is pretty accurate. There were searches related to pornography, but it wasn’t extensive,” Gilbertson said. “There was not anything that led us believe, ‘OK, you know, he has some type of a sexual desire behavior that’s driving this.’ But we also know that he deleted and wiped a lot of his devices, so we obviously don’t know what he wiped or what wasn’t there.”

Bryan Kohberger appears at the Ada County Courthouse, for his sentencing hearing, Wednesday, July 23, 2025, in Boise, Idaho, for brutally stabbing four University of Idaho students to death nearly three years ago. (AP Photo/Kyle Green, Pool)
Bryan Kohberger, 30, pleaded guilty to murdering four University of Idaho students. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole. | Kyle Green, Associated Press

Kohberger, a Washington State University Ph.D. student at the time, had a number of photos on his cellphone of female college students at WSU and the U of I, which he saved from social media, Gilbertson said. They were mostly WSU students, he said.

After Kohberger’s December 2022 arrest and police review of his cellphone data, which included the images, investigators contacted the women, Gilbertson said. They responded with “shock” and “disbelief,” as any of us would, he told the Statesman.

“They didn’t know him,” Gilbertson said. “They had no idea, no clue who he was or anything about him.”

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New Idaho education laws: What students, parents and educators should know

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New Idaho education laws: What students, parents and educators should know


July 1 isn’t just the start of a new fiscal year for Idaho public schools. It’s also the effective date for many new education-related laws.

From mandatory moments of silence to restrictions on taxpayer funding for teachers’ unions, the Legislature enacted a slew of new policies affecting public schools during this year’s session.

Here’s what educators, parents and students should know:

School trustees, administrators and teachers

Here are the new laws that will affect school trustees, administrators and teachers:

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Union activities. Public schools can no longer use taxpayer resources to accommodate teachers’ unions — including by giving teachers paid time off for union “activities” or by using payroll systems to deduct union dues.

The list of union “activities” in House Bill 516 is long. Among other things, it includes:

  • Supporting or opposing candidates for office
  • Influencing legislation
  • Promoting union membership 
  • Participating in the “administration business or internal governance” of a teachers’ union
  • Preparing, conducting or attending a union event 
  • Distributing union communications 
  • Speaking on the union’s behalf
  • Engaging in union negotiations
  • Filing a grievance on behalf of the union

A school district can’t give teachers paid time off to participate in these activities, unless the union reimburses the district.

HB 516 was based on a report from the Washington-based Freedom Foundation, an anti-union think tank, which alleged that public schools have spent more than $1 million subsidizing teachers’ unions.

The bill also prohibited districts from:

  • Deducting union dues through payroll systems. 
  • Increasing teacher pay to cover union dues. 
  • Requiring that teachers meet with the union.
  • Sharing employees’ contact information with the union. 
  • Communicating on the union’s behalf.  

Civics instruction. Public schools must now ensure that their civics instruction aligns with a law aimed at cultivating the “virtue and knowledge necessary for self-government.”

Senate Bill 1336 codified nearly four pages of requirements for civics instruction. By the time public school students graduate, they must exemplify the virtues of “prudence, justice, fortitude, moderation and patriotism” while understanding the “fundamental principles of the nation’s republican form of government” along with the “history, meaning, significance, and effect of key historical documents.”

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Click here to read the list of principles and texts that students must understand.

The bill also required that high school students complete two credits in American history and two credits in American government. These classes must include instruction on the American Revolution and founding along with instruction on the incompatibility of totalitarianism with the principles of American government.

The bill also “encouraged” public schools to display historical portraits of George Washington “in a conspicuous place” in each classroom where civics is taught.

Public charter schools can request an exemption from many of the new requirements. Traditional public schools cannot.

Lastly, the bill pushed back the implementation date for a new civics test that the Idaho Department of Education is writing. The new test will be required in 2027-28, rather than during the upcoming school year.

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High-needs funding. Public schools are now eligible to receive up to $100,000 in state funding for “high-needs” special education students.

Senate Bill 1288 set aside $5 million for students who require full-time staff support or specialized equipment. Districts can apply for the state funds to cover students whose individual education program-related costs exceed $30,000 annually.

The state will fully reimburse costs between $30,000 and $80,000. Costs above $80,000 will be reimbursed at 80%, and reimbursement is capped at $100,000. Forty percent of the state funds are reserved for rural schools.

Sexual abuse reporting. School districts are no longer allowed to conduct an internal investigation of abuse in lieu of reporting an incident to law enforcement.

Sen. Tammy Nichols, R-Middleton, proposed the law in response to sexual abuse complaints against Gavin Snow, a former special education assistant in the Boise School District.

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Senate Bill 1412, which passed with unanimous support, also requires that school districts ask job applicants for sworn statements disclosing pending or prior investigations, resignations during investigations or disciplinary action stemming from misconduct. An applicant who lies in the disclosure is no longer eligible for the job.

Funding flexibility. Public school districts and charter schools are now eligible for flexibility in how they spend state funds — if they meet performance benchmarks.

To qualify for the “earned autonomy,” districts would have to post high marks on test scores and graduation rates while charters would be graded on academics and financials.

House Bill 883’s sponsors estimated that about 10 districts and 15 charters would qualify.

Parents

Here are the new laws that parents should be aware of:

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Social transition reporting. Parents will now have a right to be notified if their child identifies as a different gender at school. Schools could face a six-figure penalty for failing to comply.

House Bill 822 requires that public school officials notify parents within 72 hours if their child requests help with “social transitioning.” This includes when a student asks to go by a different pronoun or use a bathroom or participate on a sports team that doesn’t align with their birth sex.

Sponsored by Rep. Bruce Skaug, R-Nampa, the law gives parents the right to sue a school or healthcare provider for relief and monetary damages if they aren’t notified within the 72-hour window.

The attorney general can also seek a civil penalty up to $100,000.

Rep. Bruce Skaug, R-Nampa

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Virtual school policy. Parents of virtual-school students will have new restrictions on money they receive to cover the costs of home learning.

After a state report last year found examples of taxpayer money being misused, lawmakers added limits on “supplemental learning funds.” According to House Bill 624, this money can only be spent on “eligible educational expenses, including:

  • Computer hardware, internet access or other devices used to meet a student’s educational needs. 
  • Textbooks, curricula or other instructional materials, including educational software.
  • Fees for standardized tests, advanced placement exams, certificate exams or college admissions exams. 
  • Therapies, including behavioral, physical, speech-language and audiology therapies, along with other State Board of Education-approved services. 

In addition to the rules around supplemental learning funds, HB 624 added reporting requirements for private vendors that contract with virtual schools. Vendors must disclose the costs and services they provide while demonstrating a “clear relationship between the public funds received and the services provided.”

Military preference on charter waitlists. Active-duty military parents could be eligible for preference on charter school waitlists.

Lawmakers passed a bill that allows charter schools to place children from military families third among categories of students given preference on waitlists. It’s up to each charter school whether they implement the change.

Students

Here are the new laws that students should know about:

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Moment of silence. Public school students will now have to start each school day with a moment of silence.

They can use the 60 seconds however they want — to reflect, meditate or pray — but they must be silent, and “no other activities shall take place,” according to House Bill 623.

Sponsored by Rep. Bruce Skaug, R-Nampa, the law requires that a moment of silence occur “at or near the beginning of each school day.” It prohibits teachers from instructing students on the “nature of any reflection” they might engage in.

School leaders also must notify parents about the moment of silence and “encourage” them to “provide guidance” to their children on how to use it, according to the law.

Idaho Launch cuts. Less state aid will be available for students going to college after they graduate in 2027.

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For the current fiscal year and next fiscal year starting July 1, state lawmakers — with Gov. Brad Little’s approval — cut $10 million from Idaho Launch. The program offers high school graduates $8,000 to spend on an in-state higher education degree or workforce training certificate.

While the award amounts will remain the same, the state now has $65 million in scholarship money to dole out, compared to $75 million in previous years.

IDLA cuts. Fewer students are eligible to take discounted courses through the state’s online learning platform, the Idaho Digital Learning Alliance (IDLA).

House Bill 940 cut funding for IDLA’s elementary program, limiting the platform to students in grades 6-12. The bill also cut driver’s education, and eliminated state funding for students attending all-virtual schools and non-public schools — although private- and home-schoolers can pay IDLA’s full course fee and seek reimbursement through the Parental Choice Tax Credit.

HB 940 also set new fees for courses that are eligible for state funding. Courses that satisfy a graduation requirement are $40, while courses that don’t meet a graduation requirement are $100.

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ISU event turns summer fun into rocket science – East Idaho News

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ISU event turns summer fun into rocket science – East Idaho News


POCATELLO – Learn physics and have some fun at the same time at a community event this weekend.

On Saturday and Sunday, Idaho State University’s Department of Physics will hold its annual Water Rocket Festival at Tydeman Park — North 8th Avenue and East Young Street. The first 100 kids who arrive get to build and launch their own bottle rockets.

“The hope is to sneak some science into the summer,” said Steve Shropshire, the physics professor helping to organize it.

It’s free to the public and held in conjunction with the Kiwanis Club of Pocatello’s Bing Hong Pancake Breakfast fundraiser.

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A competition will be held both days. The kid who builds the rocket that goes the furthest will be awarded with their own water-rocket launcher.

Shropshire, who’s been running events like this for nearly 40 years, started the Water Rocket Festival around 16 years ago. As a new member of the Kiwanis club, Shropshire noticed that the fundraiser only took up half of the park.

“I kind of piggybacked onto them, saying, ‘hey, you know, you’re not using this whole field over here. We could sneak some science into this,’ and I think it works well,” Shropshire said.

A student will greet each individual or group, and spend about 15 minutes explaining the physics behind building a rocket.

The kids will build their rockets, with some guidance and tips from students. All basic materials are provided.

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Students will help fill the rocket with water and bring it to the launch pad, where Shropshire handles the countdown and launch. Once it’s finished, they can do it all over again.

“The kids are welcome to redesign, rebuild and launch again and again and again, or just keep launching until the thing falls apart,” Shropshire said.

The initial appeal of the event can be summed up by a short statement from Shropshire.

“Rockets are really cool. It certainly captivates the kids’ interest,” Shropshire said.

But beyond that, Shropshire says learning basic principles of physics and then applying them could spark a long-term or lifelong interest.

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“The best way to learn is by doing. You understand the principles the best if you actually end up applying them, and seeing them in operation,” Shropshire said.

And Shropshire said the event goes even better when adults get involved.

“I would encourage parents and grandparents to get actively involved in helping their kids build the rockets because that’s kind of a bonding experience … ad I think the kids put better rockets together if they’ve got some parents to help them out,” Shropshire said.

But regardless of whether it sparks a child’s interest in physics or rocket-building, Shropshire said it’s still a worthwhile activity.

“There’s lots of fun, rewarding things that folks can do that are related to science and engineering, and having some awareness of that as the kids go through their schooling is a good thing,” Shropshire said.

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Idaho family wants millions for Potato Drop injuries

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Idaho family wants millions for Potato Drop injuries


The city of Boise is facing a potential lawsuit brought by the parents of a girl injured by shattered glass at this year’s Idaho Potato Drop held on New Years Eve.

The Idaho Statesman obtained a copy of the tort claim filed earlier this month, which is a precursor to a possible civil lawsuit.

Richard and Daryl Ratto filed the tort claim against the city and multiple other entities, according to the newspaper, after a shard of glass slashed their daughter’s face at the late-night celebration, which required surgery.

As Boise State Public Radio previously reported, police reports from that night said they couldn’t definitively conclude that concussive blasts from fireworks shattered windows on the AT&T building and the Idaho Capitol, which fell on spectators.

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The Rattos are demanding $10 million from multiple public entities, saying they’ve known for years that Potato Drop organizers have diverted from plans submitted to city officials to obtain permits for the event.

Body cam footage from that night shows Dylan Cline, the event’s CEO, high fiving his pyrotechnics contractor and saying, “F— yeah…” after being told of the broken windows by police.

City officials have 90 days to respond to the tort claim before the Rattos could file a lawsuit.

Copyright 2026 Boise State Public Radio

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