University of Idaho begins demolishing the house in which 4 students were slain, despite pleas from victims’ families to postpone it

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The University of Idaho began demolishing a house Thursday morning in which four of its students were fatally stabbed, refusing pleas from two of the victims’ families to wait until evidence they say is needed for the court case is collected from the site.

NBC affiliate KTVB of Boise and The Associated Press reported Thursday morning that the demolition had begun.

Piercing sounds of construction equipment rang out early in the morning, as an excavator started tearing down the front part of the house, and debris from the home’s walls were loaded into a dump truck, the AP reported.

Heavy equipment is used to demolish the house where four University of Idaho students were killed.
The house where four University of Idaho students were killed in 2022 is demolished in Moscow, Idaho, on Thursday.Ted S. Warren / AP

The university, which is located in the western Idaho town of Moscow, announced plans to destroy the three-story home in February as a “healing step.” The owner of the house offered it to the school after the students Xana Kernodle, Ethan Chapin, Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves were stabbed to death there in November last year.

But the Goncalves and the Kernodle families said that the demolition should be postponed until after the trial, saying in a joint statement that there are still evidentiary questions about the house which have not yet been answered. The trial date has not been set yet.

A private security officer sits in a vehicle Jan. 3, 2023, in front of the house in Moscow, Idaho where four University of Idaho students were killed in November. Image:
A private security officer sits in a vehicle Jan. 3 in front of the house in Moscow, Idaho, in which four University of Idaho students were killed in November last year.Ted S. Warren / AP file

“We all along have just wanted the King [Road] home to not be demolished until after the trial and for us to have a trial date so that we can look forward to justice being served. Is that really too much to ask?” the Goncalves and the Kernodle families said in the statement.

The families included a list of questions they said have not been answered by current evidence collection, including what could the other roommates hear from inside the house, what windows could the suspect see in from where he was parked outside, and how could the suspect get in and out without anyone seeing him?

“We certainly appreciate that there is a lot of emotion around demolishing the house, and nowhere is that felt more than with the families. But we feel certain that now is the right time to move forward with the healing that comes with the demolition,” the University of Idaho said in a press release Dec. 14.

Latah County Prosecuting Attorney William Thompson said that prosecuting attorneys and lead investigators anticipate no further use of the house because they have already collected measurements to create illustrative exhibits for the jury.

“Based on our review of Idaho case law, the current condition of the premises is so substantially different than at the time of the homicides that a “jury view” would not be authorized,” he said in a statement.

Defense lawyers for the suspect, Bryan Kohberger, who was arrested Dec. 30 last year and charged with four counts of first degree murder, also accessed the home to collect evidence.

The FBI gathered data from the house in late October, which will allow them to create visual aids that can be used in the trial, the university said in a press release.

The Goncalves and the Kernodle families said the lead-up to the trial has been plagued with delays, and called for a trial date to be scheduled. “This case has to move forward!” their statement said.

Germer Construction of Moscow will oversee the demolition, which the university said will take at least two days.

University President Scott Green said the house serves as a “grim reminder” of the murders that took place inside, and claimed that tearing it down would decrease further impact on the students who live nearby.



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