Recently reviewed video in the haunting University of Idaho murder case may support investigators’ theory that the murder suspect returned to the scene of the killing in his white sedan in the hours after the massacre.
Bryan Kohberger, 28, the murder suspect, allegedly returned to the crime scene at least once following the heinous act, according to a police affidavit. New footage of a white car driving through the area the following morning corresponds to that theory.
Kohberger’s phone pinged in the area of the students’ Moscow house around 9am on November 13, just five hours after he allegedly broke into the off-campus home and stabbed four students to death.
New footage taken near the home in the afternoon on November 13 appears to show a white car driving by the house.

Picture of white car that could belong to Bryan Kohberger driving near the crime scene where four University of Idaho students were found brutally stabbed to death
Kohberger infamously drove a white Hyundai Elantra and is believed to have driven by the students’ home at least four times on the morning of the killings, between about 3.30am and 4.00am.
According to the police’s probable cause affidavit, at around 4.20am, the same car was captured on video speeding away from the area.
The cops said there are generally ‘a very limited number of vehicles’ that enter and exit this residential neighborhood in the early hours of the morning. But the white sedan was one of them that was spotted moving past the house four times.
It was reportedly traveling at ‘high speed.’
The pattern of the car’s movement corresponded to the estimated time of the murders, which were eventually connected to Kohberger, a PhD student studying criminology at the nearby Washington State University Pullman.
Footage from Washington University showed a white Elantra leaving the campus in the direction of the students’ house just prior to 3.00am on the night of the murders. The car then returned to campus just before 5.30am on the same morning.
Cellphone data previously placed Kohberger in the area of the students’ home around 9.00am, before the murders had been reported.
A Fox News Digital camera recorded a brief sighting of a white car heading up a road next to the Moscow house. The car can be seen at the top of the video frame as two law enforcement officers converse near the side of a field at around 2.00pm on November 14.
The data also revealed that Kohberger had been in the area of the students’ house at least a dozen times before the murders, generally at odd hours of the day.
The police affidavit reads, ‘All of these occasions, except for one, occurred in the late evening and early morning hours of their respective days.’
Using forensic DNA testing, cell phone data, CCTV footage and evidence from the scene of the murders, police were ultimately able to hunt down Kohberger and charge him with the quadruple killing.

Cops have not outlined dates, times, or details of the other 11 instances when they think Kohberger stalked the Idaho students and their college home. However police did confirm that all of the 12 ‘stalking’ instances – bar one – took place late in the evening, or in the early hours of the morning
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The suspect is believed to have driven some 2,300 miles from Moscow to Pennsylvania. He was attending college in nearby Washington State

Kohberger, 28, is accused of murdering Maddie Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin on November 13 in the quiet, college town of Moscow, Idaho

Late last month, Kohberger was pulled over in Pennsylvania for a traffic violation in a white Hyundai Elantra registered in his name last month during a cross-country drive with his father.
He was arrested on December 30, during a raid on his family’s Pennsylvania home, where the white Hyundai Elantra was also found. He has been charged with four counts of murder and one count of burglary for the vicious murders of Ethan Chapin, 20, Xana Kernodle, 20, Madison Mogen, 21, and Kaylee Goncalves, 21.
Two other housemates were inside the rental home at the time of the murders, but were not attacked. One of them, detectives revealed last week, saw a masked man exit the house.
Last week, Judge Megan Marshall issued a gag order on the case, preventing investigators and attorneys on both sides from making public statements about the many facets of the pending case.