Bryan Kohberger supported the death penalty until his own life was on the line – We Got This Covered
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UNDATED - PENNSYLVANIA: (EDITORS NOTE: Best quality available) In this handout provided by Monroe County Correctional Facility, 28-year-old Bryan Christopher Kohberger is seen in a booking photo after he was arrested on December 30, 2022 in Pennsylvania. Kohberger has been accused of fatally stabbing four University of Idaho students - Ethan Chapin, 20, Xana Kernodle, 20, Madison Mogen, 21, and Kaylee Goncalves, 21 - in an off-campus house on November 13, 2022 in Moscow, Idaho.
Photo by Monroe County Correctional Facility via Getty Images

Bryan Kohberger supported the death penalty until his own life was on the line

It even caused disputes with his fellow students.

Bryan Kohberger, the convicted murderer in the University of Idaho killings, once staunchly defended the death penalty as a criminology student but ultimately avoided it himself through a plea deal.

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That’s according to newly unsealed interviews obtained by People. They reveal that Kohberger was the only doctoral candidate in his Washington State University program to openly support capital punishment, a stance that often put him at odds with classmates.

As a result, Kohberger frequently clashed with peers over the issue. One fellow student recalled him aggressively pressing the point by asking her to imagine if her 12-year-old daughter had been raped and murdered.

“Would you support the death penalty then?” he reportedly asked her, a remark that left the woman in tears during a later interview with police.

Kohberger lectured fellow students “into the ground”

That same classmate described Kohberger as overbearing and said he often cornered her at her desk to lecture her “into the ground.” She also recounted him belittling a deaf student in the program, asking whether she would be “comfortable procreating given the fact that she had a disability.”

When confronted over such offensive remarks, Kohberger allegedly replied, “I care how you feel, but you are wrong.”

Other students also recalled Kohberger saying that families of victims should have a voice in deciding whether the death penalty should be applied. At the time, he positioned himself as a firm believer in executions for heinous crimes.

Kohberger’s plea deal avoided the death penalty

Three years later, facing his capital case, Kohberger took the opposite path, and many of his victims’ families spoke out against the plea deal allowing to avoid the death penalty.

In June 2025, just weeks before jury selection, the former criminology student signed a written admission of guilt in the murders of four University of Idaho students: Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin. His confession acknowledged that the killings were “willful, unlawful, deliberate, with premeditation and with malice aforethought.”

In exchange, prosecutors agreed not to pursue the death penalty. Instead, he was sentenced to four consecutive life terms in prison.


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William Kennedy
William Kennedy is a full-time freelance content writer and journalist in Eugene, OR. William covered true crime, among other topics for Grunge.com. He also writes about live music for the Eugene Weekly, where his beat also includes arts and culture, food, and current events. He lives with his wife, daughter, and two cats who all politely accommodate his obsession with Doctor Who and The New Yorker.