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Revealed: The chilling items seized from Bryan Kohberger’s home

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A gun, multiple knives, black face masks and gloves were among the dozens of chilling items that were seized from the Pennsylvania family home of Idaho murder suspect Bryan Kohberger, search warrants unsealed Wednesday revealed.

Kohberger’s possessions were carted away by cops from his parents’ residence on Lamsden Drive in Albrightsville on the day of his arrest on Dec. 30 for the cold-blooded killings of four University of Idaho students.

The new search warrant made public Wednesday and obtained by The Post shows that law enforcement officials took away from the home a Glock 22 .40 caliber handgun and empty magazines, a knife, a Smith & Wesson pocketknife, and a third Taylor Cutlery knife in a leather sheath.

Cops also collected black face masks and gloves from the home, multiple laptops and other electronic devices, including Kohberger’s cell phone, as well as books, numerous dark-colored clothing items and shoes.


Bryan Kohberger, left, who is accused of killing four University of Idaho students in November 2022, looks toward his attorney, public defender Anne Taylor, right, during a hearing in Latah County District Court, Jan. 5, 2023, in Moscow, Idaho.
Bryan Kohberger, 28, has been accused of stabbing to death four University of Idaho students in November.
AP

Kohberger search warrant with black gloves circled in red
A search warrant made public Wednesday lists the dozens of items that Pennsylvania State Police seized from Kohberger’s family home on Dec. 30.
DA.

Kohbergers search warrant from Dec. 30
Police took away Kohberger’s Glock 22 handgun and multiple knives.
DA.

The handwritten itemized list of items seized mentions a “criminal psychology” book and another volume “with underlining on page 118,” along with a “note to dad from Bryan” and a “green leafy substance.”

Multiple documents were also taken away from the home, including medical records and Kohberger’s AT&T phone bill.

On the same day, cops searched Kohberger’s 2015 white Hyundai Elantra and emptied it of its contents, including gloves, a shovel, goggles, floor mats, boots and a reflective vest.

Authorities even stripped the sedan of its gas and break pedals, seats, seat cushions and headrests.


Bryan Kohberger's family home in Monroe County, Pennsylvania.
Police descended on the Kohberger family’s home on Lamsden Drive in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania, on the day of his arrest.
CBS Philadelphia

A previously unsealed search warrant released Tuesday revealed that cops collected Kohberger’s Under Armour underwear, a silver flashlight and four “medical-style gloves,”  and took a cheek swab to obtain his DNA.

The warrant the Pennsylvania State Police prepared, which was signed off on by a judge, listed the things they were looking for, which included: Blood or other bodily fluid and materials with blood on them; darks clothes and shoes with a diamond pattern sole, human or animal hair strands, documents and “data compilations” related to the four victims or their home.

During a search of Kohberger’s Washington state apartment — just a short drive away from the scene of the murders — local investigators seized a mattress cover possibly stained with blood, human hair strands and a single glove.


Bryan Kohberger's mugshot
The 28-year-old criminal justice PhD student was taken into custody after police linked him to the murders thanks to DNA found on a knife sheath.
ZUMAPRESS.com

Crime scene in Moscow, Idaho
The cold-blooded murders took place at a rental home in Moscow, Idaho, just a short drive away from Kohberger’s apartment in Washington state.
Derek Shook for Fox News Digital

Kohberber has been charged with four first-degree murder counts for allegedly knifing to death Kaylle Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin inside their rental home in Moscow, Idaho, of the night of Nov. 13.

The victims’ surviving roommate reported opening her door after hearing noises in the house and seeing a masked figure dressed in all black walking past her.

Police said the killer had left no fingerprints at the scene but a tan-colored knife sheath was found on a bed in one of the rooms.

Authorities zeroed in on Kohberger — a criminal justice PhD student at Washington State University — after his white Hyundai Elantra matched a vehicle that was seen driving away from the crime scene.


Final photo of the victims, pictured just hours before their untimely deaths.
This is the last photo of the four victims that was taken just hours before their deaths.

Police in Pennsylvania observed Kohberger walking outside his parents’ home in late December and collected trash thrown from the residence on Lamsden Drive.

Subsequent lab tests showed that the trash contained DNA that matched that detected on the knife sheath recovered from the site of the murders.

Investigators also obtained phone records which placed Kohberger at the location of the murders on at least a dozen occasions.

Kohberger had contacted one of the female victims through social media multiple times in October, but she did not respond to him, according to an investigator close to the case who spoke to People Magazine.

The 28-year-old Kohberger is due back in court for a preliminary hearing on June 26. He has not entered a plea yet but previously said through an attorney that he is “eager to be exonerated.”

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