Prosecutors in the Bryan Kohberger case revealed shocking new evidence tying him to the Idaho student murders. They say his Amazon records prove he bought a military-style knife months before the killings. This bombshell could blow the trial wide open.
The killer knife was never found, but police discovered its sheath under a victim’s body. Kohberger’s DNA was on it. His Amazon history shows he bought a Ka-Bar knife and sharpener in March 2022. Eight months later, four students were stabbed to death in their beds. You don’t buy a weapon like that unless you plan to use it.
A selfie taken hours after the murders shows Kohberger’s face clearly. His bushy eyebrows match what a surviving roommate told cops. The woke media tried to downplay this detail, but common sense says it matters. If it walks like a killer and looks like a killer, it’s probably a killer.
Kohberger’s lawyers want the Amazon records thrown out. They claim the evidence is “out of context.” Typical legal games. But prosecutors shot back, saying his online search for replacement knives after the murders proves guilt. Criminals always slip up, and technology exposes them.
Experts call the Amazon records a “catastrophic” blow to the defense. The knife purchase shows premeditation. The sheath left behind links him directly to the crime scene. Even a kid could see this adds up. The defense’s push to blame “algorithms” for his shopping habits is laughable.
The victims’ families deserve justice. These students were butchered in their sleep by someone studying criminology. It’s a slap in the face to law enforcement that he thought he could outsmart them. But cops followed the digital trail. Modern policing wins again.
The trial starts in August. Prosecutors will seek the death penalty. Judge Hippler has already shut down bogus defense motions. No more delays. The mountain of evidence—DNA, photos, purchase records—should bury Kohberger’s excuses.
This case shows why we need tough punishments. Criminals must fear consequences. The left’s soft-on-crime policies would let killers like Kohberger walk. But in red states like Idaho, justice is swift and sure. The victims’ memories demand nothing less.