Bryan Kohberger
In Court For Sentencing …
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Bryan Kohberger is finally being sentenced after admitting to murdering 4 University of Idaho college students — he’s in court and so are his victims’ families … and TMZ is streaming live.
The confessed killer is set to be sentenced to four consecutive life sentences … one for each of the first-degree murder counts he pled guilty to, without the possibility of parole.
Kohberger is wearing an orange prison uniform during sentencing … different than the buttoned up shirt and tie he wore last time we saw him in court.
The victims’ families are expected to speak out in court today … they can address Kohberger directly with victim impact statements.

7/2/25
Bethany Funke — one of the roommates who was not killed in Kohberger’s brutal attack — had a friend read her victim impact statement which is focused on guilt, her response to the traumatic event and her unimaginable sadness that her friends were murdered.
Dylan Mortensen has taken the stand — another surviving roommate … taking some time to compose herself. She’s talking about all the moments her friends never got to experience — graduations, birthdays, etc. She’s also diving into the mental health effects of the attack, including her difficulties with panic attacks.
Kohberger took a controversial plea deal where he agreed to plead guilty to the murders in exchange for prosecutors taking the possibility of the death penalty off the table.
With the plea, Kohberger avoids having to give any answers or explanations behind the slayings … even though President Trump is demanding Kohberger open his trap.
Kohberger submitted a signed confession … but the bare-bones admission of guilt is about all we’re getting so far … other than his admission that he murdered his victims with “premeditation and with malice aforethought.”
His heinous killing spree in November 2022 claimed the lives of Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin — who were found butchered inside an off-campus house in Moscow, Idaho.
Kohberger will also have the opportunity to speak in open court … but he’s not required to do so.
Read the full article here