Idaho
Mom of Idaho murder victim makes surprise CrimeCon appearance: ‘We miss them all terribly’

The mother of one of the University of Idaho murder victims, Ethan Chapin, shocked a true crime convention with an unexpected and heartfelt speech about her son and the three other slain students.
Stacy Chapin took to the microphone during a Q&A session to introduce herself to a jam-packed auditorium following a forensics expert’s talk on the University of Idaho student murders on Friday in Orlando during CrimeCon 2023, according to Fox News Digital.
“I’m Stacy Chapin, and I’m Ethan’s mom,” she said, receiving a loud gasp followed by applause of endearment from the stunned crowd of around 3,200 true crime junkies.
“I want all of you to know that these were four of the greatest kids, and all of the great things that you read about them [are] legitimately true.”
Jacksonville State University in Alabama applied forensics professor and host of the “Body Bags” podcast, Joseph Scott Morgan, had wrapped up his hour-long lecture titled “The Idaho Murders: An Expert Forensic Analysis” before turning to the crowd for questions.

Chapin revealed she did not sit through the presentation because the breakdown of the murders was “too hard to watch,” but expressed her teary-eyed gratitude to Morgan for his respectful and insightful remarks about the November 2022 killings.
“It’s always been a challenge for me to hear people talk about Ethan who don’t know him,” Chapin said.
Her son, Ethan, 20, was killed alongside his girlfriend Xana Kernodle, 20, her housemate Kaylee Goncalves, 21, and best friend Madison Mogen, 21, at an off-campus home steps away from the University of Idaho on Nov. 13, 2022.

“I can speak on behalf of my own son, who was an incredible human, and we miss them all terribly,” Chapin said.
The mother revealed she was “not a true crime follower” but had been “thrust into the epicenter” of the “incredibly” devoted community.
As she made her final remarks during her brief but moving speech, Chapin asked that the four slain students not be forgotten.

“They were amazing, amazing kids in the prime of their life,” a choked-up Chapin said as another round of applause broke out in the auditorium.
The unplanned moment was so moving that Morgan “knew” he had to let Chapin say her piece.
“I knew immediately that I needed to keep my mouth shut at this point,” Morgan told Fox News Digital.
“This woman, more so than anybody at this conference relative to these Idaho cases, she deserved to have a platform.”

Chapin initially did not plan on speaking, but when the microphone opened for questions, she felt compelled to drive the seriousness of Morgan’s respectful presentation home so it would stick with those in attendance.
“There was something…this overwhelming, I needed to say this story is real and that’s my son,” the mother told the outlet following her speech.
CrimeCon founder Kevin Balfe said he created the convention to allow “consumers of media to engage directly with those impacted by the cases they follow.”

“This was a powerful moment at our event, and we’re proud to have created a forum where these kinds of important conversations can take place,” Balfe told Fox News Digital.
Her son was spending the night with his girlfriend when they were both brutally killed along with Kernodle’s housemate and friends Gonclaves and Mogen after a night out in Moscow, Idaho.
Bryan Kohberger, 28, has been charged with four counts of murder in connection with the deaths.

Kohberger was a graduate student studying criminology at Washington State University, a short drive from the scene of the killings across the state border.
The accused murderer was arrested at his parents’ home in Pennsylvania on Dec. 30, 2022.
Prosecutors arrested him after finding his DNA on the button of a knife sheath discovered under the body of Mogen.
Kohberger pleaded not guilty during his arraignment in June, and his trial was scheduled for October but has been postponed till at least 2024 after he waived his rights to a speedy trial.
He could face the death sentence if found guilty of the gruesome slayings.

Idaho
16,000-Year-Old Tools Found in Idaho May Rewrite the Story of the First Americans

New archaeological findings published in Science challenge long-standing theories about when and how humans first reached North America. According to researchers excavating the Cooper’s Ferry site in western Idaho, artifacts suggest a human presence as early as 16,000 years ago—over a thousand years before the traditionally accepted migration across the Bering Land Bridge.
Radiocarbon Dating Pushes Timeline of First Settlers Back by Millennia
The excavation at Cooper’s Ferry, situated near the Lower Salmon River, uncovered nearly 200 items, including stone tools, debris from tool production, and extinct animal bones. Radiocarbon dating of organic remains, such as bone fragments from a long-extinct horse, places human activity at the site between 16,560 and 15,280 years ago. This predates the opening of the ice-free corridor, once believed to be the primary migration route for early settlers into North America.
This evidence has led researchers to question the Clovis-first model, which posited that the earliest inhabitants crossed the Bering Strait about 13,000 years ago. Instead, the findings favor a coastal migration theory, where ancient peoples may have traveled by boat along the Pacific coast, entering the continent earlier and through a different route than previously thought.
Lead study author Loren Davis, a professor of anthropology at Oregon State University, noted that his team’s discoveries have “refuted the hypothesis of the ice-free corridor,” and that they lend “great support to the idea that people came down the Pacific Coast instead.”
Archaeological Evidence Suggests Links to Ancient Japan
A striking feature of the artifacts uncovered at Cooper’s Ferry is their resemblance to tools found in northern Japan from a similar era. The shape, craftsmanship, and materials suggest a shared technological heritage, raising the possibility of a cultural continuum stretching from Asia into the Americas.
“So one hypothesis is simply that you’re looking at the extension culturally of people that are bringing these ideas with them from northern Japan,” said Davis. If this connection is confirmed, it would imply not just migration, but also a transfer of cultural knowledge over thousands of miles and years.
This hypothesis is still under review, with more comparative analysis of toolmaking styles planned by the research team. If verified, it would suggest that the ancestors of Native Americans may have had a far more diverse and complex migration history than current models allow.
Criticism and Ongoing Debate Among Archaeologists
Not all experts are convinced by the Cooper’s Ferry findings. John Hoffecker, a fellow at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, contends that the dating has been exaggerated, arguing that the earliest confirmed human activity at the site is closer to 15,000 years ago. He also disputes the proposed link to Japan, noting that genetic and dental evidence does not support a direct lineage from ancient Japanese populations.
Ben Potter, professor of archaeology at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, went further, calling the findings “superficial and unconvincing.” According to Potter, the study does not provide solid evidence against the ice corridor migration model, nor does it definitively prove an earlier presence.
Despite these critiques, both scholars agree that the findings add a compelling dimension to the broader debate over early human migration. Hoffecker, for one, concedes that the new evidence lends support to the idea of a Pacific coastal migration, a theory that has gained traction in recent decades.
Native History and Cultural Significance of Cooper’s Ferry
Long before modern archaeologists arrived, the region around Cooper’s Ferry was known to the Nez Perce (Niimíipuu) people as Nipéhe, an ancient village. Oral histories passed down through generations have described the area as a significant cultural and spiritual location. These new findings align, in part, with Indigenous accounts of long-standing occupation, adding a layer of ethnohistorical context to the scientific narrative.
The blending of archaeological science with Indigenous knowledge systems provides a richer, more multifaceted view of the past. While debates about exact dates and migration routes continue, there is growing recognition of the deep antiquity and complexity of human presence on the North American continent.
Idaho
3-year-old killed in Costco parking lot – East Idaho News

POCATELLO – A three-year-old girl is dead after getting run over in Pocatello Saturday afternoon.
It happened around 2:30 p.m. in the parking lot of Costco, according to a news release from the Pocatello Police Department.
Details about what happened are sparse, but police say the driver of a red Dodge Ram pickup ran her over. Police did not identify the driver. They are calling it an accident.
An ambulance crew took the girl to the hospital, where she passed away.
Police are still investigating.
EastIdahoNews.com will provide updates as we receive them.
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Idaho
Gem State BMX Nationals Bring 500 Riders to Caldwell

CALDWELL, Idaho — About 500 riders are competing in this year’s Gem State National, a national bike competition that’s part of USA BMX Nationals, bringing riders from across the country to the Caldwell BMX track.
“It’s a sport that’s different from any other, like a team sport. You can be on teams, but it’s an individual sport,” said Jen Hill, president of the Idaho BMX Board.
Among the competitors is 15-year-old Hope Anderson, who has been racing for 7 years after starting BMX when she was 8 years old.
“This is my home track, so I ride here weekly, so I’m really excited you know riding on the home turf, so I’m definitely very confident and really excited going into the weekend,” said Anderson.
Anderson, who has several sponsors and rides for FLY Racing, will be competing in multiple events throughout the weekend.
“I’m doing the pro-am so it’s the pros and the amateurs, but the class I race the most is the 15-16 girl expert class,” said Anderson.
After the Gem State Nationals, many riders will continue on the national circuit with hopes of making it to “Grams,” which is essentially the Super Bowl of BMX racing.
For Anderson, mental preparation is just as important as physical training.
“I think having the mental strength to push through that and be ready to train every day and take that training into your laps, I think you need to be mentally tough to continue that,” said Anderson.
The Gem State Nationals will continue throughout the weekend, with events starting at 9 a.m. on Saturday and 8 a.m. on Sunday at the Caldwell BMX track.
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