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  • 2 days ago
On "Forbes True Crime," On "Forbes True Crime," Howard Blum, author of "When the Night Comes Falling: A Requiem for the Idaho Student Murders," spoke about what Bryan Kohberger's defense might have been.
Transcript
00:00So can you lay out the prosecution's case a little bit more?
00:04Because aside from that knife sheath, a lot of that evidence was circumstantial.
00:08There was one witness, Dylan Mortensen, who was one of the roommates in the house.
00:13She saw the murderer leave the house.
00:16He had bushy eyebrows.
00:17But aside from that, she didn't really see much.
00:20So was the prosecution's case that strong?
00:23I mean, what were they going to say in court?
00:25And how nervous were they, if at all, heading to trial?
00:30The prosecutions had a good case, but it was a circumstantial case except for the DNA,
00:36because the DNA on the knife sheath was an exact match from a cheek swab taken from Koberger.
00:42That's pretty incriminating evidence.
00:44Then when you created the whole mosaic of the white car in the area of the cell phone triangulation,
00:51of Koberger, they had Koberger going online on Amazon, ordering a K-bar knife with a 7-inch
00:58steel blade, just like the one that was used.
01:01That was, you know, altogether a pretty strong case.
01:05And they had rulings from the judge recently that reinforced their case.
01:10The Koberger defense team had a couple of things that they were going to try.
01:15For example, there were drops, two drops of blood found in the house.
01:20One on a banister and another on a glove outside the house, in fact, on the threshold of the entrance to the house.
01:27All those two spots of blood had been identified solely as male DNA.
01:33The Koberger team was going to say that those spots of blood belonged to the real perpetrators,
01:41real perpetrators, and that Koberger was, in fact, a patsy.
01:45And, yes, this was his DNA on the knife sheath.
01:48However, those perpetrators were the ones who put the knife sheath in the bed.
01:54They were the killers.
01:55And so they tried this out on the judge.
01:58They gave four names in a motion.
02:01The names had been redacted of who they thought were the actual killers.
02:04And the judge looked at this and he said, this isn't evidence.
02:09This is an allegation.
02:11This is, in effect, a scarless rumor.
02:13And he said, you can't bring this into the courtroom.
02:16And there was another strategy the defense was rumored that they were going to try, which was,
02:21hey, no, he was just out stargazing at the time of the murder.
02:25But as you pointed out before, it was a cloudy night.
02:28It was freezing that that dawn of November 13th.
02:33But was the defense's strategy going to be, hey, we're just going to.
02:37We don't have much.
02:38So what we're going to do is poke as many holes in the prosecution's story.
02:42We're going to try to cast as much reasonable doubt really as possible.
02:46Well, you know, there's an old legal adage.
02:49When you have the facts, you pound the facts.
02:52When you don't have the facts, you pound the table.
02:54And boy, for the past two and a half years, they were, to their credit, pounding the table.
03:00Their large ambition was to save Brian Koberger from a firing squad.
03:06They wanted to make sure that the death penalty was not inflicted in this case.
03:10They wanted to raise reasonable doubt.
03:13But in recent weeks, as I said, the alternate perpetrator strategy was dismissed.
03:19And then the alibi, stargazing on a cloudy night, the judge looked at that and he said, quote,
03:25this is not an alibi.
03:27He wouldn't allow it to be introduced.
03:29So they really had nothing.
03:30All they could hope to do was delay, delay, and delay.
03:34And with the trial coming up, they run out of delays.

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