Cell phone expert tests missing data, benefits University of Idaho murder suspect Bryan Kohberger

A cellphone analyst suggested during a preliminary hearing Thursday that he was stymied by law enforcement’s disorganized data collection and record-keeping in the case against Bryan Kohberger, the graduate student accused in the fatal shootings of four Idaho students.

Sy Ray, whom Kohberger’s defense team plans to call as an expert witness at trial, said his review of the evidence provided so far by the FBI and police does not show that all of the cellphone data extracted of Kohberger’s phone at the time of the murders in 2022. has been mapped.

He further verified that it was crucial that he receive all of AT&T’s source data and associated information so that he could verify it, given that Latah County prosecutors are pinning Kohberger at the scene of the murders, in part due to his use of his cell phone and records from his cell towers. .

“It’s a terrible practice to substantiate probable cause with these call detail records that give breadcrumb trails to individuals and then not map them,” Ray said.

“Because of the fragmentation of the data, the missing data, the data that I look at that is incredibly inaccurate, anything that’s missing absolutely benefits the defense right now,” Ray tested, adding: “There’s a lack of other reports from which I cannot say that you benefit from Mr. Kohberger or the State.

He added that it is clear why some data is not available: “Is it human error? Is it accidental? Is this intentional?

What he has seen so far, he said, seems to “exonerate” Kohberger.

Ray, a former Arizona police detective, has demonstrated that he is usually an expert witness for prosecutors in criminal cases. His expertise has already come under scrutiny.

Earlier during Thursday’s hearing, a senior Moscow police investigator verified that thousands of hours of video had been collected in connection with a Hyundai Elantra that prosecutors say Kohberger was driving when he left his apartment in Washington state, 9½ miles from the scene of the murders. location in Moscow, Idaho.

Thursday’s testimony was part of an ongoing attempt by the defense to ask the judge to involve prosecutors in turning over some evidence during the discovery phase. DNA experts are expected to be summoned at a later closed-door hearing. Prosecutors argued they were not deliberately withholding information.

The slow pace of preliminary hearings and discussions weighing on such a high-profile case have only served to delay the trial and push the trial date to the spring or summer of 2025, frustrating the victims’ families, who say their ability to healing was hindered. .

Three of the victims: Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Madison Mogen, 21; and Xana Kernodle, 20, lived in an apartment building near the University of Idaho, where they were students. Kernodle’s boyfriend, Ethan Chapin, 20, had been staying at our house and was also killed in early November. 13, 2022.

In an affidavit following Kohberger’s arrest weeks after the killings, prosecutors said he was linked to the scene through male DNA found on a knife sheath left in the victims’ apartment building. Investigators also said his cellphone use and video surveillance linked him to the crime.

Kohberger’s alibi maintains that he made nighttime trips and that these only increased over the course of the school year.

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