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Model of Moscow home built for Bryan Kohberger murder trial. See for yourself

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

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  • Judge allowed use of 3D Moscow house model for witness demonstrations, not as evidence.
  • Bryan Kohberger accepted a plea deal, avoiding murder trial and received life sentences.
  • Prosecutors weighed only one of Kohberger’s former professors to testify at Idaho trial.

Leading up to Bryan Kohberger’s anticipated capital murder trial, attorneys on each side clashed over a host of elements that could be presented to jurors, including a college assignment about crime scenes and a 3D model of the home in Moscow where four University of Idaho students were killed.

Over objections from the defense, Judge Steven Hippler approved the house model for use with witnesses in the courtroom for demonstrative purposes only, meaning it could not be considered a piece of evidence. He also allowed the prosecution’s push to try to admit as evidence the college term paper Kohberger completed while studying at DeSales University in Pennsylvania to illustrate his knowledge of processing crime scenes.

Kohberger, 30, later agreed to plead guilty to the four murders in a deal to avoid the death penalty, which ended the need for a trial. Hippler sentenced him last week to consecutive life prison terms with no chance of parole.

The four victims were U of I undergraduates Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen, both 21, and Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin, both 20. The three women rented the home at 1122 King Road with two other female roommates, and Chapin was Kernodle’s boyfriend and slept over for the night.

Like the term paper, the not-to-scale model the FBI produced is no longer of use for the state’s planned purpose at trial. The 4-foot-tall King Road house model on wheels has not before been seen by the public, but the Latah County Prosecutor’s Office provided images of it to the Idaho Statesman in response to a public records request.

The FBI built a not-to-scale model of the home at 1122 King Road in Moscow where four University of Idaho students were fatally stabbed in November 2022 for Bryan Kohberger’s scheduled murder trial in Boise.
The FBI built a not-to-scale model of the home at 1122 King Road in Moscow where four University of Idaho students were fatally stabbed in November 2022 for Bryan Kohberger’s scheduled murder trial in Boise. Latah County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office Provided

The U of I took control of the King Road property in spring 2023 after its prior owner donated it following the murders. Against the wishes of some of the victims’ families, the university razed the home in late December 2023 — almost a year to the day of Kohberger’s arrest. Neither the defense nor prosecution opposed its demolition ahead of the expected trial.

In the absence of the real thing — including as the trial moved from Moscow 300 miles south to Boise — the prosecution team intended for the model to help jurors grasp spatial relationships inside and outside of the three-story, six-bedroom former college home during witness testimony, they said in court records.

Idaho Fourth Judicial District Judge Steve Hippler granted the request of prosecutors in Bryan Kohberger’s murder case to use a 3D demonstrative model at trial to help jurors understand the property’s layout in the absence of the actual home.
Idaho Fourth Judicial District Judge Steve Hippler granted the request of prosecutors in Bryan Kohberger’s murder case to use a 3D demonstrative model at trial to help jurors understand the property’s layout in the absence of the actual home. Latah County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office Provided

“Our intent is just simply to have this as a tool to help witnesses explain their testimony and help the jury understand,” Latah County Prosecutor Bill Thompson told the judge.

Defense made fiery objection to model

Anne Taylor, Kohberger’s lead attorney, countered that the defense had not received details about the model through the legal process of discovery to meet requirements of the rules of evidence. For Hippler to permit the FBI’s mock-up would violate her client’s constitutional rights, she said.

“This is an unfair surprise to Mr. Kohberger,” Taylor told the court in April. “The jury can place great weight on that, and it might not be actual. It could skew the testimony. It could skew the truth.”

The FBI used 3D photo modeling to construct a 35-by-48-by-52-inch, not-to-scale version of the King Road home in Moscow where four University of Idaho students were fatally stabbed in November 2022.
The FBI used 3D photo modeling to construct a 35-by-48-by-52-inch, not-to-scale version of the King Road home in Moscow where four University of Idaho students were fatally stabbed in November 2022. Latah County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office Provided

Hippler, however, reasoned that the defense had equal access to the crime scene before it was knocked down, and still had upward of four months to prepare its own use of the diagram ahead of what was to be an August trial before Kohberger reached a plea deal. It is not uncommon for demonstrative exhibits to be disclosed close to trial, he added.

“There is a significant distinction between demonstrative trial exhibits or trial models, charts, things of that nature, and attempts to use things for evidentiary value in and of themselves,” Hippler said. “And the more complex, it’s not particularly different than a drawing by a witness or something like that.”

Bryan Kohberger’s public defense team objected to the use of a not-to-scale model of the Moscow home on King Road where four University of Idaho students were found stabbed to death. Judge Steven Hippler ruled to allow the 3D diagram at trial, for demonstrative purposes only.
Bryan Kohberger’s public defense team objected to the use of a not-to-scale model of the Moscow home on King Road where four University of Idaho students were found stabbed to death. Judge Steven Hippler ruled to allow the 3D diagram at trial, for demonstrative purposes only. Latah County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office Provided

Jurors — and the public — could have expected to see the house model as a mainstay in the courtroom during testimony. That was to include investigators, Thompson said.

DeSales professor possible state witness

Kohberger received his bachelor’s degree from DeSales in 2020, followed by his master’s in June 2022, the university wrote in a statement after Kohberger was arrested. Professors at the school, including well-known forensic psychologist Katherine Ramsland, have long declined interview requests about their former pupil.

In the immediacy of Kohberger’s plea deal, Ramsland broke her silence and told The New York Times she recalled him as “respectful, polite” and “genuinely engaged with the material” in her criminal justice courses. Initially, Ramsland said, she thought case investigators must have arrested the wrong man, before coming to believe his culpability.

“I wasn’t surprised by the plea once the judge took away every option — that he couldn’t use his alibi, he couldn’t use an alternate suspect, there’s nothing left,” Ramsland told the Times. “And now he’s facing a lot of evidence piled up and the death penalty, so it did not surprise me.”

And yet, Thompson told the Statesman in a phone interview Monday, the state only planned to call one of Kohberger’s former professors as a possible witness. And it wasn’t Ramsland, he said.

“The only witness the state was considering calling is the professor that Kohberger wrote the paper (for) about crime-scene processing,” Thompson said. “That’s the only one that we felt might have potentially relevant testimony for trial.”

In May 2020, Kohberger completed the 12-page term paper, released in court records in March, as part of criminal justice coursework for Professor Dave Seip. The crime-scene scenario paper was a typical assignment for Seip’s class, Carolyn Steigleman, spokesperson for DeSales, told the Statesman by email.

Seip retired from DeSales after the 2023-24 academic year, Steigleman said. Other members of university faculty are continuing to decline interviews at this time, she added.

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This story was originally published July 29, 2025 at 3:00 AM with the headline "Model of Moscow home built for Bryan Kohberger murder trial. See for yourself."

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Kevin Fixler
Idaho Statesman
Kevin Fixler is an investigative reporter with the Idaho Statesman and a three-time Idaho Print Reporter of the Year. He holds degrees from the University of Denver and UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism. Support my work with a digital subscription
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