- 3 days ago
The autopsy documents for the Idaho four were partially unsealed in January 2026. The forensic details around Xana Kernodle specifically have not been fully covered — until now.
In this video we break down exactly what the unsealed autopsy reveals about Xana's final minutes at 1122 King Road on November 13th 2022.
WHAT THIS VIDEO COVERS:
— 67 stab wounds and what the number tells forensic experts
— 25 defensive wounds and what they prove about Xana's resistance
— The blood trail on the stairwell bannister and what direction it moves
— Forensic pathologist Joseph Scott Morgan's overkill analysis
— Xana's 4:12 AM TikTok activity and the DoorDash delivery timeline
— The knife sheath location and what it tells us about the sequence of events
— Dylan Mortensen's ground floor encounter and tonic immobility explained
— Bryan Kohberger guilty plea July 2nd 2025 — what sole responsibility means
— Family statements at sentencing July 23rd 2025
SOURCES: Probable Cause Affidavit December 2022 | Unsealed Autopsy Documents January 2026 | Kohberger Guilty Plea July 2 2025 | Joseph Scott Morgan forensic analysis | Court TV | ABC News | People.com
AI DISCLOSURE: This video contains AI-generated visuals used for illustrative purposes. All narration is based on verified court documents and expert forensic analysis. YouTube AI disclosure has been completed.
Bryan Kohberger was sentenced July 23rd 2025 to four consecutive life terms with no possibility of parole at Idaho Maximum Security Institution Kuna Idaho.
Xana Kernodle. October 2002 — November 13 2022. For the lives that she would have changed. 🤍
Xana Kernodle, Bryan Kohberger, Idaho murders, Idaho four, Moscow murders, 1122 King Road, autopsy unsealed, forensic evidence, defensive wounds, overkill, blood evidence, Kohberger guilty plea, true crime, forensic pathology, Joseph Scott Morgan, King Road murders, Idaho 2022, Kohberger sentenced, The Dark Stories, darkstoriesmind, true crime 2026, autopsy report, criminal psychology, forensic psychology
In this video we break down exactly what the unsealed autopsy reveals about Xana's final minutes at 1122 King Road on November 13th 2022.
WHAT THIS VIDEO COVERS:
— 67 stab wounds and what the number tells forensic experts
— 25 defensive wounds and what they prove about Xana's resistance
— The blood trail on the stairwell bannister and what direction it moves
— Forensic pathologist Joseph Scott Morgan's overkill analysis
— Xana's 4:12 AM TikTok activity and the DoorDash delivery timeline
— The knife sheath location and what it tells us about the sequence of events
— Dylan Mortensen's ground floor encounter and tonic immobility explained
— Bryan Kohberger guilty plea July 2nd 2025 — what sole responsibility means
— Family statements at sentencing July 23rd 2025
SOURCES: Probable Cause Affidavit December 2022 | Unsealed Autopsy Documents January 2026 | Kohberger Guilty Plea July 2 2025 | Joseph Scott Morgan forensic analysis | Court TV | ABC News | People.com
AI DISCLOSURE: This video contains AI-generated visuals used for illustrative purposes. All narration is based on verified court documents and expert forensic analysis. YouTube AI disclosure has been completed.
Bryan Kohberger was sentenced July 23rd 2025 to four consecutive life terms with no possibility of parole at Idaho Maximum Security Institution Kuna Idaho.
Xana Kernodle. October 2002 — November 13 2022. For the lives that she would have changed. 🤍
Xana Kernodle, Bryan Kohberger, Idaho murders, Idaho four, Moscow murders, 1122 King Road, autopsy unsealed, forensic evidence, defensive wounds, overkill, blood evidence, Kohberger guilty plea, true crime, forensic pathology, Joseph Scott Morgan, King Road murders, Idaho 2022, Kohberger sentenced, The Dark Stories, darkstoriesmind, true crime 2026, autopsy report, criminal psychology, forensic psychology
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NewsTranscript
00:004.12 in the morning. She was on TikTok. Her food had just arrived. A jack-in-the-box bag
00:07labeled with her name, Zanna, sitting on the second floor kitchen counter. Still half-eaten.
00:14She was awake. She was alive. And somewhere above her, on the third floor, something was wrong.
00:23She didn't have to go up there. She could have stayed in her room, finished her food,
00:27gone to sleep. She had no reason to believe that the noise above her was anything more than her
00:33friends coming home late. But Zanna Kernodle was not the kind of person who turned away
00:39when something felt wrong. So she went upstairs. And what happened in the next few minutes
00:45is not just the most heartbreaking part of the Idaho murders case.
00:50It is the reason Brian Koberger is in prison today. And this is The Dark Stories.
01:17I'm you 10 minutes from now. Damn it. You are handsome. I was just thinking the same.
01:26We are sexy. We are sexy bitches. Yeah.
01:32What's this?
01:34It's an art project.
01:35Okay, I like it. Picasso.
01:37Before we talk about how Zanna Kernodle died, we need to talk about how she lived.
01:44Because she was not a crime statistic. She was not a headline. She was a 20-year-old woman
01:51from Post Falls, Idaho, who had her whole life mapped out in front of her. Her sister Jasmine
01:57described her as, and I want to quote this directly, positive, funny, and loved by everyone
02:04who met her. Zanna played volleyball through high school, track, soccer. She was athletic,
02:11competitive, full of energy. The kind of girl who never sat still when there was something
02:16to be done. The kind of girl who filled every room she walked into. For her high school graduation
02:23in 2020, Zanna decorated her mortarboard cap with flowers and butterflies. And the words she
02:30chose to write on that cap, the words she wanted people to see as she crossed that stage, were
02:36four words that I have not been able to stop thinking about since I first read them.
02:41For the lives that I will change.
02:44She was 18 years old when she wrote that. She had no idea how true it would become.
02:51She had no idea what those words would one day mean.
02:54She enrolled at the University of Idaho to study marketing. She and her sister Jasmine had a dream
03:01to start their own marketing firm together after graduation. Two sisters, one business.
03:08The future completely wide open.
03:11She joined the Pi Beta Phi sorority. She worked part-time at the Mad Greek Restaurant in Moscow,
03:17the same restaurant where her friend Madison Mogan also worked. She loved EDM music, family trips,
03:26her dog, Shoeshine. And then there was Ethan. Ethan Chapin was Zanna's boyfriend. They had been
03:34friends first, the way the best relationships always start. By the time she died, Zanna had spent an
03:40entire summer with Ethan's family. His mother later said she was already one of them. She already was.
03:47On the last night of her life, Zanna and Ethan went to a Sigma Chi fraternity party together.
03:53They came home. They were in her second-floor bedroom. Ethan fell asleep. But Zanna was still
04:01awake, too restless to sleep, the way she always was. She ordered food at 4 in the morning. She was
04:08watching TikTok. She was just being herself. Awake, alive, restless at 4 a.m.
04:16Her last TikTok session was at 4.12 a.m. Less than 15 minutes later, she was gone.
04:26For this, but um, my vape was found, so we gotta go get it. I don't know where the fuck
04:38my car keys are.
04:39I won't drive. I won't drive like I could, but I won't. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go.
04:49Let's go. Who can drive? Can you drive? No one can drive.
05:01I'll do it. I'm gonna pee my pants. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. I'm gonna pee. Don't pee.
05:07I'm gonna pee. Don't fucking pee.
05:11What the fuck? No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
05:23Let me walk you through exactly what the evidence tells us happened that night.vexd
05:28Not the speculation.
05:29Not the theories. The documented forensic court verified
05:34timeline of November 13, 2022. 4 a.m. A DoorDash driver pulls up to 1122 King Road. He hands off
05:45a jack-in-the-box order labeled with the name Zanna. He leaves. He will later be interviewed
05:51by police, completely ruled out as a suspect, and become one of the key witnesses that establishes
05:57the exact timeline of that night. 4.12 a.m. Forensic examination of Zanna's phone confirms
06:04she is actively using TikTok at this exact moment. She is awake. She is in her room. Everyone else in
06:12the house is asleep, or at least in their rooms, except her. Investigators believe that Brian
06:19Koberger entered the house through the rear sliding glass door on the ground floor sometime before 4 a.m.
06:26He went upstairs to the third floor first, to Madison and Kaylee's room. What happened there,
06:33we covered in our last video, and if you haven't watched that video yet, I'm going to link it at
06:38the end of this one, because this story only gets fuller when you understand everything that happened
06:44that night. But then, sometime between 4.12 and 4.17 a.m., something changed. Zanna heard something.
06:53The surviving roommate, Dylan Mortensen, who was on the ground floor, woke up multiple times during
07:00this window. She heard what she thought was Kaylee's dog. She heard what she thought was someone
07:06saying, there's someone here. But police later confirmed those sounds may have been coming from
07:12Zanna's phone, from TikTok videos still playing in her room.
07:18What is not in dispute is what the blood evidence tells us. Blood from Madison Mogan and Kaylee
07:24Gonsalves was found on the stairwell banister, on the handrail leading from the third floor
07:30down to the second floor. And neither Madison nor Kaylee ever stood up that night. Neither of
07:36them had blood on their feet. They could not have put that blood on the stairs. There's only one
07:41explanation for the blood on that banister. Brian Koberger was moving from the third floor to the
07:48second floor, carrying the blood of his first victims with him, when Zanna encountered him.
07:54She walked up those stairs, and she found him coming down. Five feet two inches tall, unarmed, alone,
08:03in complete darkness, against a man who was six feet tall, carrying a Ka-Bar combat knife, and who had
08:10already killed two people. And Zanna Kurnodal chose to fight.
08:32What I am about to share with you comes directly from the unsealed autopsy report, court documents,
08:38and forensic expert analysis. I want to be upfront about that, because what follows is detailed,
08:45and it is heavy. But Zanna's story deserves to be told fully. Not sanitized. Not summarized away into a
08:54single sentence. Fully. Because she lived it fully. Zanna Kurnodal sustained 67 stab wounds. 67.
09:07Let me put that number into context. Madison Mogan sustained 28 wounds.
09:13Kaylee Gonsalves sustained 38. Ethan Chapin sustained 17. That is 83 wounds across three people who were
09:24attacked in their sleep. Zanna. Alone. Awake. Fighting. Sustained 67. More than Ethan and Madison combined.
09:36Nearly as many as Kaylee and Ethan combined. One person. 67. Forensic death investigator Joseph Scott
09:48Morgan, who has spent decades working homicide cases and is one of the most respected voices in forensic
09:54pathology, looked at these numbers after the autopsy report was unsealed. And he said four words that I want
10:01you to sit with for a moment. This is overkill. This is a frenzied event. Overkill in forensic language
10:12does not simply mean extreme violence. It means something specific. It means that the attacker lost
10:19control. That something happened to disrupt their plan. That instead of the calculated methodical attack
10:27they had rehearsed in their mind, something or someone forced them into a state of fury. That someone
10:35was Zanna. The autopsy breaks down those 67 wounds in clinical, precise detail. 23 stab and incised wounds
10:46to her face, neck, and scalp. Seven stab wounds to her chest. Four stab wounds to her abdomen. Three
10:56incised wounds to her back. Five incised wounds to her lower extremities. And then 25 incised wounds to
11:06her upper extremities. Her arms and her hands. 25. In forensic pathology, wounds on the hands and forearms
11:18have a specific name. They're called defensive wounds. They're the cuts you receive when you raise your
11:24hands to block a blade coming toward your face. When you reach out to grab the knife away from someone.
11:30When you refuse, absolutely refuse, to stop fighting. And then there is the detail in the autopsy report
11:39that stopped me completely when I first read it. The wounds extended into the bones of her right hand.
11:46She fought so hard, for so long, against a man twice her size, that a knife cut through her skin,
11:55through her tissue, and into the bones of her hand. And she kept fighting.
12:03Joseph Scott Morgan said something on Court TV that I think about every time I go back through this
12:08evidence. He said, she fought. You don't get contact trace blood elements on the feet without that having
12:16occurred. The blood on the bottom of her bare feet. This is one of the most important forensic details in
12:23the entire case. Because it proves, beyond any reasonable doubt, that Zana Kurnodal was on her feet.
12:31Moving. Running. Turning. Reaching. Fighting. During the attack.
12:39The other three victims had no blood on their feet. They were attacked in their sleep and never stood up.
12:46But Zana was on her feet. And the blood transfer evidence, the patterns of blood across her body,
12:53the wiped and smeared markings consistent with active movement, these tell the story of someone
12:59who was fighting for her life with everything she had. And it was during this fight, this desperate,
13:07ferocious, completely unequal battle in the dark, that Brian Koberger dropped something.
13:14A tan, K-bar, military-style knife sheath, found on the floor of Madison Mogan's bedroom.
13:21With Brian Koberger's DNA on the snap button. The single piece of physical evidence that linked him to the crime
13:29scene.
13:30The evidence that gave investigators a direction. The evidence that led to his arrest 46 days later.
13:37The evidence that ultimately put Brian Koberger in a maximum security prison cell,
13:43where he will spend the rest of his life. He dropped it because Zana caught him off guard.
13:49Because she disrupted everything he had planned. Because 5'2", unarmed, at 4 in the morning,
13:56in the dark, she made him lose control. She made him panic. She made him human.
14:04And in doing so, she gave four families justice.
14:10Well, miss, what's your name?
14:12Zana.
14:13Zana, do you live here?
14:14Yes.
14:14Hey, did Megan talk to you earlier?
14:16I do not.
14:17Hey, does Megan live here?
14:20I do not.
14:22Megan Mogan?
14:24Matt Mogan, yes.
14:25Madison Mogan, yes.
14:26Madison Mogan, okay. She does live here?
14:27Sorry, we...
14:29She is at the club.
14:31She's 21. I'm just going to bed.
14:34I have a couple friends over, but this is my idea.
14:37Have you talked to Maddie tonight?
14:39Yes, I have. She's at the corner club.
14:42Okay. Did she tell you anything about anything that happened earlier or anything like that?
14:47Honestly, not really. I've just been here the past hour.
14:53Okay, okay.
14:54Just trying to go to bed.
14:55Can I grab your ID for me?
14:57Yeah, I'm not 21.
14:59Okay.
14:59My roommates are 21.
15:02I just can't go to bed.
15:03We're not here for...
15:05We're not here to talk about the alcohol stuff, okay?
15:07Okay.
15:08There is a detail in this case that does not get nearly enough attention, and I think it
15:13matters, not just forensically, but psychologically, because it tells us something important about
15:19the days between the murders and the arrest.
15:22In the days after November 13, 2022, while Brian Koberger was still walking free, still driving his Hyundai Elantra, still
15:31going to his criminology classes at Washington State University,
15:35his classmates noticed something about him.
15:38He had cuts and scratches on his hands.
15:42People who sat near him in class, people who saw him in the corridor, they later told investigators
15:47that Koberger appeared in the days following the murders with visible marks on his hands.
15:53He didn't explain them.
15:54He didn't mention them.
15:56He just showed up, taught class, graded papers, sat in seminars about criminal behavior, and went home.
16:05Think about that for a moment.
16:07A man who had just killed four people, who had just spent 15 minutes inside a house and
16:13walked away carrying blood on his clothes, sat in a classroom about criminal psychology,
16:19with scratches on his hands from a 20-year-old girl who refused to let him walk away clean.
16:26Because that is what those scratches were.
16:29Forensic experts believe those marks came from Zanna, from her hands grabbing at him.
16:35From her fingernails.
16:36From her fight.
16:38She marked him.
16:39She physically, literally marked the man who killed her.
16:44And then he had to walk around for the next 46 days carrying that mark on his body.
16:50According to reporting, it is partly because of this evidence, the DNA on the sheath, the scratches, the blood trail,
16:58the overwhelming forensic picture that Zanna's fight created, that Koberger ultimately chose to take the plea deal.
17:06Because if Zanna had not fought back, if she had died quietly in her bed like the others, he may
17:12have collected that knife sheath before he left.
17:15He may have walked out without a single traceable piece of evidence behind him.
17:19And he may never have been caught.
17:22That is not speculation.
17:24That is what the evidence tells us.
17:27Zanna Kurnodal's fight is the reason there was a conviction.
17:31Full stop.
17:33The fact that he had visited the home so many times before, late at night, early hours, he's presented this
17:40pattern of behavior.
17:41He went back to the home the morning of before police had been called.
17:45I think to see if his circus, so to say, had started to unfold.
17:51And I think that he would not have been able to refrain.
17:55Yeah, definitely a little bit.
17:57I still think there's a lot of answers that I would like.
18:00So until I get those, I think I still am going to be a little hung up on this.
18:07So just about the answers, I guess.
18:10Sidney Goodmits was Zanna's childhood best friend.
18:12I know.
18:15Well, Sidney and O'Dat have started a fundraiser through their gymnastics academy in Florida to raise money for Zanna's scholarship
18:21endowment.
18:22Zanna was one of our students for about six years.
18:25And besides that, she was also one of my daughter's best friends.
18:28So she was always at our house.
18:30Her dad was single.
18:31She would come to our house until he'd pick her up after work.
18:34So it was almost like losing another daughter.
18:36So it's been a really difficult time period for sure.
18:39While Zanna was fighting on the second floor, Dylan Mortensen was on the ground floor.
18:44She had been woken up multiple times during that window by sounds she couldn't quite identify.
18:51Something that sounded like a dog.
18:53Something that sounded like voices.
18:55A sound she thought might be crying coming from upstairs.
19:00And then she heard something that has never left her.
19:03A male voice coming from the direction of the second floor.
19:07Saying words to the effect of
19:10It's okay.
19:12I'm going to help you.
19:14Dylan opened her bedroom door for the third time that night.
19:17And a figure in black clothing, wearing a mask covering his mouth and nose, gloves on his hands,
19:24walked directly past her.
19:26So close that she could see his eyebrows above the mask.
19:30He looked at her.
19:32She looked at him.
19:33And then he walked past her, out the sliding glass door, and was gone.
19:404.17 a.m.
19:42Security cameras nearby captured a white Hyundai Elantra driving away from the area.
19:48Brian Koberger going home.
19:51Dylan Mortensen froze in that moment.
19:53And I want to address that directly.
19:56Because there are people who have questioned why she didn't call for help immediately.
20:00Why she went back to her room.
20:02Why she did not do more.
20:05Forensic psychologists and trauma specialists have a specific term for what Dylan experienced in that doorway.
20:11It is called tonic immobility.
20:14It is the nervous system's response to extreme, immediate, life-threatening danger.
20:19The brain, in a fraction of a second, makes a calculation.
20:24Fight is not possible.
20:26Flight is not possible.
20:29Freeze.
20:30It happens to prey animals in the wild.
20:32It happens to human beings in moments of extreme threat.
20:36It is not a choice.
20:38It is not weakness.
20:40It is survival.
20:42And Dylan Mortensen survived.
20:44She has carried that night with her every single day since November 13th, 2022.
20:51The face.
20:52The eyes above the mask.
20:54The silence as he walked past her.
20:57She was the only person who saw Brian Koberger leave that house.
21:01And she is the only reason we have a physical description of him from that night.
21:07There is one detail from this case, one specific, documented forensic detail, that I have not heard covered properly anywhere.
21:17And I think it is important to include it.
21:20Not because it is shocking, but because it speaks to the full truth of what Zana Kurnodal endured.
21:27And she deserves the full truth to be told.
21:30When the first officer arrived at 1122 King Road in the early morning of November 13th,
21:36when they entered the second floor bedroom where Zana and Ethan were found,
21:41the officer could not immediately identify Zana Kurnodal.
21:45The 23 wounds to her face, neck, and scalp,
21:49the wounds she received while facing her attacker,
21:53while looking at him,
21:55while refusing to turn away,
21:57were so severe that initial identification was difficult.
22:01I am telling you this because it is real.
22:04Because the true weight of 67 wounds
22:07is not just a number on a page.
22:09It is a human being who stood in the dark
22:12and chose to fight
22:13and paid every possible price for that choice
22:17and still won.
22:20Still made him drop the sheath.
22:23Still marked his hands.
22:25Still gave the world the evidence it needed.
22:2867 wounds.
22:30And she fought through every single one.
22:34On July 23rd, 2025,
22:38the day Brian Koberger was sentenced
22:40to four consecutive life sentences
22:42without the possibility of parole,
22:44Zana's family stood up in that courtroom
22:47and faced the man who killed her.
22:50They looked at him directly
22:52and they spoke.
22:54Her father, Jeff Kurnodal, spoke first.
22:58He told the court that on the plane ride
23:00to the sentencing hearing,
23:01in the dark of the cabin somewhere over Idaho,
23:04half asleep,
23:05he heard a little girl's voice calling for her dad.
23:16Jeff Kurnodal told the court he has found something that many people in his position
23:21never find.
23:23Closure, he said,
23:26we just have to go on.
23:27We are going to go on with everything
23:29and make things better
23:31because that is what it is all about.
23:35We miss Zana.
23:37Her smile,
23:38the things she did,
23:41and she just wants us to make more memories
23:43and not be sad.
23:46Her sister Jasmine,
23:47who had called Zana her best friend,
23:49her little sister,
23:51her North Star,
23:52stood up and looked at Koberger
23:54directly across that courtroom.
23:56And she said,
23:58a piece of my heart was ripped away.
24:01There is no way to fully describe the weight of losing my sister.
24:06But her light still shines,
24:08and her voice will echo louder than this pain.
24:12You didn't take that from us,
24:14and you never will.
24:16And then there was Randy Davis,
24:18Zana's stepfather.
24:20He stood up.
24:21He looked at the man who killed his daughter,
24:23and he said something that I genuinely did not expect to hear in that courtroom,
24:29something that took more strength than anything else said that day.
24:33He said,
24:35I could no longer live with the hate in my heart.
24:39I have forgiven you.
24:42Forgiveness is not weakness.
24:44In the face of that much loss,
24:47in the face of everything that family has been through,
24:51forgiveness takes more strength than anything else in this entire story.
24:57Ryan,
24:58I'm here today to tell you I have forgiven you,
25:01because I no longer could live with that hate in my heart.
25:07And for me to become a better person,
25:09I have forgiven you.
25:11And anytime you want to talk and tell me what happened,
25:14get my number.
25:15I'm here.
25:16I'm here.
25:16No judgment.
25:17Because I do have answers or questions that I want you to answer.
25:22He has contaminated,
25:24tainted their family name,
25:26and I know that that's what he has to live with,
25:30and that has to be his pain.
25:32You're going to go to hell.
25:34I know people believe in other stuff.
25:36You're evil.
25:38There's no place for you in heaven.
25:40You took our children.
25:42Zanna was such a light in my life and so many others.
25:45She was a person I could relate to the most,
25:47and she knew and understood me more than anyone.
25:49She taught me a lot of stuff.
25:51She taught me how to be a dad.
25:53She was so positive and lighthearted
25:55and understood the gift of life more than anyone I know.
25:58She was my baby sister,
25:59but she was so much wiser
26:00and experienced so much more in life than I ever have.
26:04She never let an opportunity pass her by
26:06and enjoyed all the moments she had.
26:08I know she loved living in her house in Moscow with her friends.
26:11I would hear so many stories about her and her roommates
26:13and it made me so happy to know she had such great friendships.
26:16They were always so happy
26:18and the way she would talk and smile about him
26:20was something I've never seen her do before.
26:22She truly loved him so much
26:23and I know he had so much love for her.
26:25They had something so special and everyone around them knew.
26:28Zanna, you will not be forgotten.
26:30You have impacted so many lives
26:32and have given people so much love.
26:34I hope I can make you proud
26:35and try to leave an impact on this world
26:37and on people like you did.
26:38Zanna Kernodo's family started a scholarship fund
26:41in her name at the University of Idaho
26:43for students who want to change lives,
26:47just like she wrote on that graduation cap.
26:50Her childhood gymnastics coach joined the effort.
26:53Her old roommates built a foundation
26:56alongside Kaylee and Madison's families.
26:58Three young women, gone far too soon,
27:02still changing lives from wherever they are now.
27:07Her last TikTok video, posted on October 28, 2022,
27:12just two weeks before she was killed,
27:14received three million views after her death.
27:18Three million people watching her,
27:21just being herself.
27:23In her graduation mortarboard, she wrote,
27:26For the lives that I will change.
27:29She was 18 years old when she wrote that.
27:32She was still becoming who she was going to be.
27:36She never got to open that marketing firm with Jasmine.
27:40She never got to see what came next.
27:43And yet, in her final 15 minutes,
27:46she changed everything.
27:48She gave four families justice.
27:51She gave law enforcement the evidence they needed.
27:54She gave a courtroom the truth.
27:57She gave the world a conviction.
28:00Not because she was trained for it,
28:02not because she had a plan,
28:04but because,
28:06in the dark,
28:07alone,
28:09terrified,
28:10she chose not to stop.
28:13She chose to keep fighting
28:15until there was nothing left to fight with.
28:19Zanna Kurnodal was five foot two.
28:21She was unarmed.
28:23She was 20 years old.
28:25She was alone in the dark.
28:27And she fought anyway.
28:30That is not a detail in a crime report.
28:33That is who she was.
28:35If this story stayed with you,
28:37if Zanna's courage meant something to you,
28:40please share this video.
28:43Not for the numbers,
28:45for her.
28:46These stories deserve to be told.
28:49These people deserve to be remembered
28:52by more than headlines and statistics.
28:55In the next video in this series,
28:57we are going to go somewhere
28:58that most true crime channels are afraid to go.
29:01inside the psychological profile
29:04of Brian Koberger.
29:06Not what he did,
29:08but what kind of mind
29:10plans something like this,
29:12executes it,
29:13and then drives home,
29:15does his laundry,
29:16and goes to sleep.
29:19What is actually in a mind like that?
29:22And whether the answers are as disturbing
29:24as we all suspect they are.
29:27I'll see you in the next one.
30:15I'll see you in the next one.
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