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UROARE IDAHO Suspect Bryan Kohberger makes a very small request before trial

UROARE IDAHO Suspect Bryan Kohberger makes a very small request before trial

Idaho pursuits suspect that Bryan Kohberger wants a judge to exclude his Amazon shopping list from the evidence that jurors will see at his next trial, according to a recently insigned judgment.

The 30 -year -old crime suspect is expected to be tried in August for killing students at the University of Idaho, Madison Mogen, 21 years old, Kaylee Goncalves, 21 -year -old Xana Kernodle, 20 and Ethan Chapin, 20 years old, at their house outside Campus from 2022.

His lawyer Elisa Massoth claims that Amazon, including “Kohberger’s click activity”, should be forbidden from the process, because the term is too vague and does not “show a complete image”.

The defense also argued that the account could have been used by other “household members”.

It is not clear what potentially embarrassing articles are on the Amazon shopping list.

But Dateline from NBC reported that Kohberger bought a Ka-Bar knife on the shopping platform in 2022 as mentioned Fox News. The police have previously tried to tie Kohberger to the knife sheath found under the body of one of the victims, according to judicial documents.

Defense submission says that the Amazon history and the amount of click activity has chosen limited data that does not show a complete image, compared to the guarantees that have requested extended data. “

“The refinement of the state of all history Amazon and the activity of Amazon click is outside the context, incomplete and harmful unjustly, which makes it inadmissible,” the Defense Lawyer added.

The recording also claimed that Amazon uses algorithms led by AI that “shapes the user’s behavior” and “actively guides the purchase behavior”.

UROARE IDAHO Suspect Bryan Kohberger makes a very small request before trial

Bryan Kohberger’s defense also wants the terms “kill”, “psychopath” and “sociopath”, also forbidden from the process, forbidden from the process

From the left: Dylan Mortensen, Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen (on Kaylee's shoulders), Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Bethany Funke

From left: Dylan Mortensen, Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen (on Kaylee’s shoulders), Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Bethany Funke

The Off-Campus house at 1122 King Road, where the four students were found brutally on November 13, 2022

The Off-Campus house at 1122 King Road, where the four students were found brutally on November 13, 2022

“This means that browsing and the history of buying a user can not necessarily reflect the deliberate intention, but could have been modeled by the Amazon algorithm,” concluded Kohberger’s lawyer.

Kohberger’s team also requests that the bizarre two -word phrase “Bushy Eyebrows” is prohibited from his high -profile penalty process.

In a series of motions, submitted on February 24 and made public this week, the defense of accused Killer Mass made a series of requests asking the judge to block certain words and phrases in his trial.

On the list proposed by forbidden terms is “crime”, “bushy eyebrows”, “psychopath” and “sociopath”.

The “Bushy eyebrows” was the defining feature that he mentioned on the surviving room colleague of the victims killed, Dylan Mortensen, about the masked intruder he saw leaving the students’ house after believing that the brutal crimes took place.

According to Kohberger’s defense, “the description offered by DM is not reliable and should be excluded” from the courtroom.

Mortensen is expected to be a key witness when Kohberger will be tried in August accused of crimes.

The four students of the University of Idaho were found stabbed to death in a student house outside the campus, at 1122 King Road in Moscow, Idaho, on November 13, 2022.

Bryan Kohberger (seen in a crack) tries to have the phrase

Bryan Kohberger (seen in a crack) tries to have the phrase “bushy eyebrows” forbidden from his crime process

DNA was found on a Ka-Bar knife sheath (seen in a stock picture) left behind on the spot

DNA was found on a Ka-Bar knife sheath (seen in a stock picture) left behind on the spot

The brutality of the crimes – and the mystery around which was responsible – they plunged the small college city in fear and sent shock wave throughout America.

Kohberger’s team also continues to fight to remove the death penalty on the table in this case – with their last argument being that the accused killer has autism and that his diagnosis exposes him to the unacceptable risk that a jury will condemn him for murder and sentenced to death.

According to prosecutors, the Touch DNA found on the sheath belongs to Kohberger and was followed using investigative genetic genealogy.

Kohberger’s team has tried to be thrown out of the IgG evidence in the trial.

The defense also pointed to the blood from two unknown men, also found at King Road Home – one on the railing between the first and second floor, and the second on a glove found outside.

So far, he has offered a vague alibi for the night of crimes, claiming that he had run at night, looking at the stars.

No witness can corroborate where he was, his lawyer Anne Taylor acknowledged in a court file.

Like the DNA found on the knife’s sheath, prosecutors say that Kohberger was also related to his crimes through Hyundai Elantra White – which fits the car in the crime place – and the mobile records that placed it in the vicinity of the house.

Kohberger follows in court in April.