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One Night in Idaho: The College Murders - Season 1 - Episode 04: Part 4
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00:12That night, I had left an apartment complex near the King Road house at 4am, and I remembered
00:19thinking to myself that it was eerily quiet.
00:24Usually, you can see the last remnants of people leaving a party, but it was silent.
00:37This is gonna sound really weird, but that night, me and Emily woke up in the middle of
00:42the night.
00:43As soon as I woke up, I saw Hunter locking the door.
00:48I don't think I've ever locked that door.
00:53It felt like there was something pulling me towards doing that.
00:58I hustled up and got home as quick as I could.
01:02It was like my intuition was telling me something was wrong before I even knew.
01:31The probable cause affidavit revealed what Maddie, Kaylee, Zanna, and Ethan were doing
01:38that night before they died.
01:42It's painted the most detailed picture yet of what happened that night.
01:49A few weeks after that night, Dylan had expressed to me what happened.
01:55She heard Kaylee and Maddie come home, and she heard them chit-chatting on the couch for
02:03a while.
02:04The couch was on the wall of her bedroom, and she was pretty much sleeping through it.
02:13The surviving roommates, Bethany Funk and Dylan Mortensen, confirm that all members of the
02:20King Road residents were asleep by 4 a.m.
02:24That's with the exception of Zanna Kurnodal.
02:28At 4 a.m., DoorDash drops off an order for Zanna.
02:33At 4.05 a.m., a white Elantra is seen driving in front of the King Road house, making a
02:39turn,
02:39and then parking.
02:42And cell phone data shows that Zanna was on TikTok around 4 a.m.
02:47That is when Dylan hears some commotion kind of upstairs.
02:53She thought she heard someone say, there's someone here.
02:58She looked out of her bedroom door on the second floor and didn't see anything.
03:04Dylan said that she remembered hearing crying.
03:08And she thought she heard a male voice say, it's okay, I'm going to help you.
03:13Video from next door at 4.17 a.m. captures the sound of a whimper and a loud thud.
03:19A dog barking can also be heard on the footage.
03:23Dylan opens her door for a third time, and she describes seeing a man with bushy eyebrows.
03:29This person walked past her bedroom and out the sliding glass door of the back room.
03:35She said that she just scaredly closed the door.
03:40Like, boom.
03:48Dylan got really scared.
03:50She was trying to lock her door.
03:53And she started calling Bethany, calling Zanna, calling Ethan, calling Kaylee, calling Maddie.
04:00Trying to see if anyone's awake.
04:02She's like, what the hell's going on?
04:03Someone needs to get up and tell me who was here.
04:07Eventually, she just decided to go for it.
04:10And she made a run for it to Bethany's room down in the basement.
04:17Dylan was like, did you hear any of that?
04:19And Helena was like, pfft, no.
04:21And so, I think that Dylan was probably just like, I must have imagined it.
04:30And if you didn't hear anything, then let's go to bed together safely.
04:35I think that she 100% heard the murders of Zanna and Ethan.
04:41I am confused on how one of the roommates saw him, but then the cops were not called until noon.
04:47Eight hours.
04:49We're in between.
04:50I just, I have no words.
04:52When we hear stories about people faced with something that's unexpected, that's scary, that's happening, that could be threatening or
05:02dangerous, and they act in ways we wouldn't expect,
05:05it's actually exactly how we should expect them to behave because you're not going to be necessarily thinking logically or
05:16rationally in the manner that you would like you and I are sitting here and talking about it.
05:20Folks are not going to understand that this behavior is the behavior of somebody who's just experienced trauma.
05:27I'm sure Dylan and Bethany see these hurtful comments, and they can't really say anything back to it.
05:35But, you know, they are not speaking out for obvious reasons, legal reasons, and that's what the public I don't
05:47think necessarily understands.
05:50I think it's very important for everybody to know that what if doesn't matter because if she had known what
06:00was going on, it would have been too late anyways.
06:08It wasn't until the morning when she realized, holy shit, that couldn't have been a dream.
06:16And that's when I got my phone call from her.
06:20They hadn't even gone upstairs or anything.
06:22She just called and said, something weird happened.
06:25I thought it was a dream. I'm not quite sure anymore.
06:29I tried to call everybody to wake them up, and no one's answering.
06:35I was like, okay, I'll come over.
06:38That morning, Emily had said, like, Dylan wants us to come over.
06:42And I remember when I set foot in the house, Hunter was like, get out, somebody call 9-1-1.
06:48Dylan was the one that was on the phone with 9-1-1.
06:51And I had to take the phone from her because she was so completely hysterical.
06:56They're like, what's the address? What's the address? What's the address?
06:58I was like, 1-1-2-2 King Road.
07:03Police entered the house and went up to the second floor.
07:08They went into Zanna's bedroom and found her and Ethan dead with stab wounds.
07:17Police then went up to the third floor and into Maddie's bedroom,
07:21where they found both Maddie and Kaylee in Maddie's bed, dead with multiple stab wounds.
07:28I believe what you're going to find out is that this killer was stalking a particular individual.
07:34Maddie could have been an intended target because both Kaylee and Maddie were sleeping together in Maddie's bedroom.
07:40Maddie would have been the first person the killer had access to when they entered the room over here.
07:46If that's true, then does that mean she was the target?
07:52They said the attack was targeted. Then they said they're not sure if one person was targeted.
07:57I don't know how he would have found them to stalk them.
08:02We don't hang out with Wazoo people, so I just don't know how they would have ever, like, met for
08:08him to stalk them.
08:09And I don't know how he knew where they lived.
08:17One of the things that makes this case strange is that most often the perpetrator knows the victim.
08:24But we still do not know if Koberger did it at all.
08:28And if he did it, if he had a relationship at all with these victims, did he know them at
08:33all?
08:35Those are answers we don't have yet, because when it comes to Brian Koberger, we know very little about him
08:42officially.
08:44A lot of what we know really just comes from his records at school, the fact that he applied for
08:49certain internships, that he was fascinated with what motivates people to commit crimes.
08:54He was someone who traveled to school and then bounced. So you didn't really think too much of him, and
09:01you would try to get personal, and he wouldn't give you much.
09:06He never had any friends he really associated with. I don't think too many people paid much mind to him.
09:13I mean, people say, oh, he was a loner, or, you know, he allegedly had problems with girls.
09:18My exact words for that were, this person has trouble with women.
09:24And when you look at the victims, they're attractive, they're involved in Greek Roe, they look like the kind of
09:31kids that were popular, you know, surrounded by friends.
09:43My supervisor pulled me aside in her office, she's like, off the record, what do you think happened here? And
09:48I said, I think this was an incel.
09:55The definition there is involuntarily celibate. So this is a sort of person that cannot connect with the other gender
10:03sexually and maybe feel some resentment toward that gender.
10:08Hayley Ouellette says they met in 2015 when he took her to a movie, then insisted on escorting her to
10:14her dorm room.
10:15He kept trying to tickle me, and I would ask him to stop, and he would get very serious.
10:22I proceeded to pretend to throw up in the bathroom, hoping that he would leave.
10:26And then he messaged me, and he said that I had good birthing hips.
10:30I still think the more we find out that this was incel rage, rage against women, because of his history
10:36with women, starting in high school, where the girls would be bullying him.
10:41Certain men feel like they are owed a relationship with a woman, that that's not something they should have to
10:47earn, it's something that they should be given.
10:50I did hear about a situation where Koberger had followed a student out to her car, like trying to flirt
10:59with her, and she reported it to someone in the criminal justice department.
11:04At Washington State University, he starts getting into altercations with students, and we find out later that he was fired
11:13from his TA-ship.
11:14He got more feisty and belligerent, even arguing with his professors, until December 19th, Brian Koberger is officially terminated by
11:24Washington State University.
11:26And I'm pushing him for documents. I want to know about the stuff about Koberger with the girls, if that's
11:32true. I want to see his record.
11:34But again, it's just tricky because there's rumors about his behavior at the school, but none of it's verified until
11:40we have the documentation.
11:45At DeSales University, some of the people that Brian and I studied that were serial killers were Ted Bundy, Jeffrey
11:53Dahmer, Ed Kempfer, and Elliot Rodger.
11:59So Elliot Rodger, he was a young man in college that was basically jaded and hated his life because he
12:09lacked the attention from friends, family, and most of all, women.
12:15So Elliot Rodger, one day, first he invited some people over that he claimed to be friends with. He stabbed
12:21them to death.
12:22He then went out with firearms to a sorority and killed a number of women in a sorority.
12:30He then drove around, shot multiple other people in public, and he ended his own life in his vehicle.
12:38But after the fact, there was a written manifesto, and he basically tells you, this is what I did, this
12:44is why I did it.
12:46Roger's sexist rants are part of a culture that breeds violence against women.
12:50Roger wrote, all of those beautiful girls I've desired so much in my life, but can never have, because they
12:57despise and loathe me. I will destroy.
12:59After Brian Kohlberger is arrested, I start thinking, okay, Papa Rodger, Elliot Rodger.
13:08If you listen to some of the manifestos of Elliot Rodger, he talks about hating all the girls from Alpha
13:15Phi, the same sorority that Kaylee was in.
13:20Brian was interested in a lot of things that we learned, but he did have more of an interest in
13:27Elliot Rodger.
13:28I talked to other girls in the class where we were all bothered by what Elliot Rodger did, but Brian
13:35did not seem bothered.
13:36Incel, in my professional opinion, this is a particularly dangerous version of misogyny, because incel communities have this presence in
13:49an online space.
13:52They can say things and provide support for things that perhaps they wouldn't do in a face-to-face context,
13:58because they would be concerned about what the social consequences or the repercussions would look like.
14:08And because it's immediate, the speed, the algorithm, the echo chamber, and the anonymity perhaps leads people to think that
14:18their ideas are not so extreme.
14:21Elliot Rodger is glorified and valorized and martyred among communities that were coming together in these online spaces.
14:52It was just so terrible.
14:55For a while, there was actually a subreddit called Brian Nation.
15:03It was sort of this Brian Koberger fan club where people were posing all these theories about how he could
15:09be innocent and writing him letters in jail and women sending him money, which is really something else.
15:21We know with the advent of social media, people are becoming more lonely, more isolated.
15:33So I think this problem is likely growing as we see people become more isolated due to technology.
15:42When they caught Brian Koberger, there was, like, all the fake accounts that came on Instagram pretending to be Brian
15:48Koberger.
15:49And I got a DM from one of them that was like, hey, it's Brian. Sorry for killing your friends.
15:53And I, like, read it and I was like, what the f—what the hell?
15:58Or somewhere seen that, I was like, I can't believe, like, somebody sat down and wrote that.
16:03It almost was, like, scary. So I was like, this is, like, means that people are, like, capable of, like,
16:08copycatting it.
16:15Until there is a mechanism to stop this kind of thing from happening on social media, it's always going to
16:21continue happening and it's going to get worse.
16:23I mean, since this case specifically, the King Road house has basically become a tourist attraction.
16:29This is where Brian Shipag Koberger murdered Kaylee, Zanna, Ethan, and Maddie.
16:37It's not a—it's not an art exhibit. It's, you know, this happened. It's real. We feel it.
16:48I can only imagine how hard it's been for them at times.
16:53You know, the suspect is in jail just down the road, and whenever there's a trial thing, there's media cameras
16:58on campus.
17:00It's overwhelming.
17:06We start with breaking news out of Idaho, where prosecutors have filed to seek the death penalty against the man
17:12accused of killing four University of Idaho students.
17:16Wow, the state must really feel they've got, like, a rock-solid case to go after the death penalty.
17:20They've certainly got what it takes to seek a capital punishment here.
17:25They're saying that his acts were especially heinous and that he has an utter disregard for human life.
17:31If they're able to prove just one of these factors, Brian Koberger could be put to death.
17:43Because this is a death penalty case, there are dozens of court hearings.
17:49And so it's going to take much longer than other types of cases.
17:59So, Ms. Taylor, where do we start?
18:03Your Honor, in this case, we have a lot of records that we have to go through.
18:07I know that the court has heard about 51 terabytes of information that we've received.
18:13There is no possible way I can even read or watch everything I have now or react to things that
18:20are still coming in if we're to have a deadline in time for trial.
18:24It's impossible for us to do it.
18:26But we are not going to be ready.
18:29The defense has, more than the prosecution, said it's going to take them longer to prep for trial, that they're
18:36not ready yet.
18:37That's not uncommon in most cases.
18:39But at this point, they're the ones who are pushing the timeline back.
18:43I don't understand why he can ask for more time.
18:50Because I wish I had more time with my son.
18:53I don't, I can't buy more time.
18:58There's absolute frustration in that they're just buying time.
19:04They're trying to find loopholes.
19:06Every day is just longer and longer.
19:10You keep putting it off, I mean, what could happen?
19:13And the more you put it off, the more can happen.
19:22So the trial's been postponed indefinitely.
19:26We just don't know how long we're actually going to have to wait.
19:34No matter what the reality is, until the trial's over, this is going to have a huge impact on Moscow.
19:41It was kind of like dying down a little bit.
19:44Because nobody heard anything new and then it kind of started again.
19:47It's kind of how it's been.
19:49Like a new thing comes up.
19:50And then it dies down again.
19:51And then there's a new thing.
19:56I mean, can you imagine you're a student, you're trying to just concentrate on your classes.
20:00And now for over a year, anytime you turn on the TV or go on social media, it's like all
20:05about this case.
20:06People just couldn't let this case go.
20:10I need to see something besides theories, pings, and one piece of touch DNA.
20:16It just doesn't make sense to me that someone who has studied criminology for years would leave what's been described
20:20by police as a messy crime scene.
20:22This entire court is a sham operation to cover for people who really did what happened in Moscow, Idaho.
20:30I was under the impression that it would stop, but it didn't.
20:34The first thing that pops up when you Google my name is still my name connected to four murders.
20:41I'm getting ready to graduate here soon, and I don't even know how that's going to affect my ability to
20:46get a job.
20:48There's still websites where me and Emily are getting called killers.
20:52Even after posts, like, co-worker being arrested, it's just like, still, these two are behind it.
21:01Idaho 4 murders. Quick look at Emily Allent and Hunter Johnson.
21:05Emily Allent was, for a while at least, dating this dude Hunter Johnson.
21:09There's a bunch of speculation that Hunter and Kaylee had a thing on the side which angered Emily, and that
21:14was tied to the murders in some way.
21:15There's almost this expectation or pressure when you go through something like this that you're supposed to remain poised and
21:23respectful.
21:24And I didn't want to because, to me, these people didn't deserve respect.
21:28This is her house.
21:29They were causing so much unnecessary pain to the community, and eventually it just became too much, and I did
21:35go private because I, as one person, couldn't take it anymore.
21:43I ended up deleting TikTok, Instagram, and, like, every news media outlet on my phone just because I didn't want
21:51to look at it.
21:53It's like I'm trying to grieve in any way possible, and you guys are not helping with it.
22:03I'm not a huge social media person anymore.
22:06I just, I don't go on it very much.
22:09All my, like, social media is private.
22:12I had no, I had no desire to talk to anyone about anything.
22:18I think that most accounts were on public.
22:21You don't really think to put it on private, but there is so much information that is out in the
22:29world about you that you don't even know or post,
22:31especially when you're in a small town and you're posting where you are.
22:35People are going to be able to figure out very quickly.
22:38So I put my account on private.
22:40When they were making rude remarks about my friends who are no longer here,
22:47I didn't want to be on social media.
22:48I didn't.
22:50And I, in social media, I, I feel like I have a love-hate relationship with social media.
22:56People post the good, happy times.
23:00Nobody wants to post a picture of them crying at two o'clock in the morning because they're still grieving
23:05their friends.
23:09I think that the only thing that mattered was peace for families.
23:18Our family's view was just to stay out of it.
23:20Like, we're going to do what we do best and just be with each other.
23:26And we don't need the media for anything.
23:29It's not like they're going to help us bring our brother back.
23:37The very first thing I told my kids when this heinous thing happened was like,
23:42this won't sink us as a family.
23:44We'll figure it out together.
23:48We'd spent five months in the depths of hell.
23:52And then we just realized, okay, we just have to figure out how to move forward.
23:55So we just made a deal with each other that from that day forward for our kids, for our family,
24:00for our friends,
24:02that we would wake up every day forward and put our best foot forward.
24:13You forget you have a choice.
24:15You have a choice to get up and to live your best life.
24:19But I still can't imagine what it must be like to be Maisie and Hunter.
24:40So, I mean, to have that kind of a bond with your sibling,
24:44you know, somebody you don't know life without, then have them gone.
24:49But it is what it is, honestly.
24:55There's never a moment in my life now where the thought of Ethan not being here isn't there.
25:00Like, that thought is just engraved in my head that he's not here.
25:04And it's something that I don't think will ever go away.
25:08It kind of sounds bad to say back to normal, but I think we both kind of just try and
25:13pretend like it's normal.
25:17I feel like that's mostly why I just don't pay attention to anything else,
25:21because I just focus on, like, the good things about him.
25:29Not about all else that's going on.
25:39After the memorial, we were going to meet up at the cemetery and try to find a place to put
25:45him.
25:50It was very hard for me.
25:56I told Stace that we can't do this right now.
26:02This isn't going to happen.
26:04Do you put him in a little crematorium?
26:10This wasn't right.
26:11Just not a place where you put your, where do you put your kid?
26:18Right?
26:19Where do you put your kid?
26:20So I decided that the best place for him to be was home.
26:40So he will sit in the basement until one of us pass.
26:52He's safe.
26:59And I can, uh, I can go down and talk to him any time I want.
27:10And I do.
27:26This is where Madison grew up.
27:30This is where she lived.
27:35We didn't honestly get a lot back.
27:38Just to be.
27:40Meaning you didn't, you didn't want him back or you just.
27:43Wasn't able to come back.
27:45So the stuff that was able to come back, I went through and like, oh, some of this is silly.
27:50Some of this is very sentimental.
27:51Like, I still have the yellow sweater that she was wearing that day.
27:57The sleeves are still rolled up.
28:03So I found this sweatshirt.
28:04When we went down, it was the first family weekend.
28:07And Maddie really wanted this sweatshirt.
28:10And it wasn't her size.
28:13We couldn't find it.
28:14And I found it in like a total different place.
28:16And when I found it, I was like, Scott, look, we found this sweater.
28:20And then I'm on video with her.
28:25And she's cutting it.
28:28And I'm like, we were on FaceTime.
28:29I'm like, what are you doing?
28:32She's like, this is how everything is worn, Mom.
28:35I'm like, okay, I got to get used to this.
28:37I got to let it be.
28:40But yes, super glad we got that back.
28:46I feel like the struggle getting to this point was, I can't do this.
28:54I just can't.
28:59But it's just not mentally healthy to waste time.
29:04Other than laughing about Maddie, talking about Maddie, it's really all we do.
29:12There is very little place in my heart for holding on to anger.
29:19That's not what you heal from.
29:24A year ago, I couldn't have spoken to you at all.
29:27I couldn't have articulated any of this.
29:32And it's taken friends, family time to slowly creep out of that really, really bad place.
29:43And it's also reminding myself, like, how would Maddie and Kaylee want to see me?
29:52Would they want to see me crying in my pajamas and can't get out of bed?
29:55Or would they want to see me talking about them and how happy and how amazing they are?
30:03And that's a struggle.
30:07You never know how strong you are until strong is all you can be.
30:13This has always been her space, always will be her space.
30:20And it's a place to come and just feel at peace, feel her presence.
30:26You never know why I'm given in bed.
30:29You never know how false that will be alive.
30:46You never know who you are, son.
30:46You never know how any of you is much of the violence.
30:47That I've studied right now, as Mac says,
30:47I'm not?
30:55I'm not really an animal bump that you are now.
31:09365 days since my life changed forever.
31:13All of our lives changed forever.
31:16I read somewhere that once you lose someone you love,
31:19you gain an angel.
31:22But we have four amazing angels watching over all of us every day.
31:31Ethan was very, very witty.
31:35I think that was the most noticeable thing about him.
31:40He's just always trying to be funny.
31:42And I loved that about him.
31:45Minions, tonight we steal the moon!
31:49I remember all the different memories that we shared.
31:53Shit.
31:58Any time that I go to Taco Bell, I think of Ethan.
32:02That was his favorite place by far.
32:04He was the first person I saw that opened up.
32:07He pre-opened up all of his Taco Bell packets
32:09so that he wouldn't have to stop eating.
32:12He could just feast.
32:13And I remember I thought that was the funniest thing.
32:15And now every time I go to Taco Bell,
32:17I make sure that I, you know, pre-open like four or five first, you know,
32:21so I don't have to stop.
32:26I could go on and on about the person Xana was,
32:29but the little memories are what replayed in my head over and over.
32:34Her backflips she would attempt,
32:36which usually resulted in her failing
32:38and popping right back up, laughing, yelling,
32:41I'm okay.
32:43Xana loved music.
32:44We called her DJ Xan all through college
32:47because she had the best music to play
32:50and she was always playing it.
32:52She would bring her MacBook almost everywhere
32:55and it doesn't matter where we were at,
32:56she would get on any chair
32:58and just stand with her laptop.
33:01A lot of things come to my mind when I think about Maddie.
33:05Me and my friends would always reenact how she would dance
33:07and we have so many videos of it.
33:10Just kind of putting her hand out
33:11and like bouncing like this.
33:14She just never cared who was watching.
33:22Kaylee always had such a happy and joyful outlook on life.
33:26She was just ambitious and wanted,
33:29I think she just wanted to experience anything
33:31and everything she could
33:33and that was how she was going to live her life.
33:37She decided it and she just did it.
33:42Whenever there's like a nice sunset
33:44or like really pretty sunset,
33:45like we'll always text each other and be like,
33:47oh, Kaylee's saying hi.
33:59As I sit back and think of all the memories,
34:01I've learned dwelling won't do anything.
34:04It's important to remember all the good times
34:06and be grateful for the relationships
34:08we were all able to form with Ethan,
34:10Zanna, Madison, and Kaylee,
34:12even if it was for a short amount of time.
34:15To know Ethan, Zanna, Madison, and Kaylee
34:19was to love Ethan, Zanna, Madison, and Kaylee.
34:23We will now take a moment of silence.
34:34I think that the world has made their idea
34:37of who Kaylee, Maddie, Zanna, and Ethan were.
34:41And so I think it's important to still emphasize
34:43like who they were as friends
34:45and who they were as people.
34:46They aren't just these victims.
34:52I don't think there'll ever be
34:53a full acceptance and closure
34:55of this horrible thing that happened.
35:18Wouldn't you put that sweet soy glaze thing in here now?
35:22Oh, I don't know.
35:22Read about it.
35:25We graduated and we've been in Boise
35:29since 2023, February.
35:31We just have been like putting pieces together
35:34since everything, like slowly.
35:37We were forced to like grow up
35:40and there was never like,
35:43you never get like told
35:44when you're gonna have to grow up.
35:45It's just like that was when it was for us.
35:50There's no longer thoughts of the world
35:53being a sweet, great place
35:56that you always know and truly believed it was.
36:02You know, I had long life goals for myself.
36:07I had a vision of what I wanted my life to look like
36:12and I've given up on some of my goals
36:15just because I realized I'm a different person.
36:19I'm still working on the new me
36:21to be able to get to a place to set goals again.
36:32I hang out with a completely new group of people
36:35at U of I now.
36:36And it's kind of sad to say that
36:39but it just was like at the time
36:41it was nice to be with people
36:43that like honestly didn't personally know them
36:46which is so weird to say.
36:54It's a very bittersweet moment
36:57to say goodbye to my apartment.
36:59This was my first off-campus housing apartment.
37:02I loved it.
37:04Now I'm moving out.
37:08This is my spare bedroom.
37:11This window faces 1122 King Road.
37:22They still have the same caution tape
37:24up 368 days later.
37:29It's a constant reminder that that's a crime scene
37:32that is still ongoing.
37:44My first two weeks back into school
37:46I didn't handle it very well.
37:49It's been a long road of emotions
37:52and rollercoaster rides.
37:55It's like separation anxiety almost.
37:59Finally I'm doing pretty well though.
38:01A lot of people really helped me out
38:03and helped me get my life back on track.
38:07But my window is on the very end of our fraternity
38:11which faces the opening of where that house is.
38:17So I wake up every morning
38:19and I open up the blinds
38:21and that house is the first thing I see
38:24boarded up looking like shit over there.
38:28I just want it to go away
38:29so I don't have to look at it anymore.
38:41It's a haunting reminder of an unthinkable tragedy
38:44that soon the house at 1122 King Road
38:47will stand no more.
38:49The University of Idaho is saying in a statement
38:52it's time for its removal
38:54and to allow the collective healing
38:55of our community to continue.
39:09There is still so much speculation
39:11about what really happened in that house.
39:14There are still so many unanswered questions.
39:18When the trial comes
39:19I will probably be very nervous.
39:23I've never had to deal with something like this
39:25but at the end of the day
39:26I want justice.
39:28Justice for the families
39:29and for the friends.
39:32I would feel the most closure
39:35if the suspect actually admits he did it
39:40or it's like confirmed in the trial
39:44and he gets put in jail forever
39:46would be nice.
40:02I don't follow the case at all anymore.
40:07I don't have care
40:08in the world to keep
40:13seeing everything be untrue.
40:16I think the hardest part about
40:20this process is
40:22nobody has it right.
40:26And it's frustrating to see
40:30so many people talk about
40:33Brian Koberger.
40:35I think he's a loser
40:36that shouldn't get talked about at all.
40:39I think the only true story
40:40should be about their lives.
40:44Getting the story out there
40:45feels right
40:47because it's really important
40:48that I'm the one telling it
40:49instead of
40:51some random-ass person.
40:54There's just parts of it
40:56that need to remain
40:57just ours.
40:58You know, we care that
40:59we are the ones who tell his story
41:01and capture his true spirit.
41:04I loved,
41:06I love
41:06those girls.
41:08We're not going to talk
41:08in past tense.
41:11I will love them.
41:13I'll remember them.
41:14I will cry about them.
41:16I will continue
41:17to keep them alive.
41:33I will continue
41:34to keep them alive.
41:36All right.
41:38We love them.
41:38I love you.
41:46I love you.
41:55I love you.
41:57I love you.
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