Bryan Kohberger Attorney
Autism Should Prevent Death Penalty …
If He’s Found Guilty
Published
Bryan Kohberger‘s attorney is arguing her client’s autism diagnosis should prevent a death penalty sentence in the event he’s found guilty of murdering four college students … stating capital punishment would constitute “cruel and unusual punishment” due to his inability to fully understand the consequences.
Attorney Anne Taylor filed a motion last week stating if her client were to be found guilty and sentenced to death, that would violate his Eighth Amendment constitutional rights. Kohberger, accused of murdering four University of Idaho students in the dead of night in 2022, was formally diagnosed by a neuropsychologist last month.
1/23/25
Idaho Fourth District Court
A neuropsychologist evaluated Kohberger and found he “continues to exhibit all the core diagnostic features of ASD currently, with significant impact on his daily life.”
Tuesday evening, a judge ordered the motion to be sealed, likely due to medical records privacy … and we’ll have to wait to see how the judge interprets the defense’s motion once the trial begins.
TMZ.com
Prosecutors allege Kohberger snuck into a now-demolished off-campus home and slaughtered four victims — Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves — but left behind his DNA on the sheath of a hunting knife. He’s charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one felony count of burglary, and is set to go on trial this summer.
Kohberger was arrested in Pennsylvania in late 2022 after driving cross-country with his dad from Washington state.
Kohberger made his first court appearance this year in January in Boise, where his defense team argued with prosecutors over key pieces of evidence.