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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Idaho murder suspect Bryan Kohberger was dropped from high school police course after complaint

By Kevin Fixler Idaho Statesman

BOISE, Idaho — In high school, Bryan Kohberger, now suspected of killing four University of Idaho students in Moscow, was kicked out of his law enforcement training program after a complaint was made about him stemming from an incident involving female students, according to a former administrator at the county’s technical school.

An ensuing investigation took place into the incident, which Tanya Carmella-Beers labeled “pretty serious,” but declined to detail in a podcast interview because of federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act protections. That led to Kohberger’s removal his sophomore year from the law enforcement focus at Monroe Career & Technical Institute (MCTI) in eastern Pennsylvania. He then switched to the heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) program for his junior year at the half-day technical school, the Idaho Statesman previously reported.

In February, Carmella-Beers, who oversaw the technical school’s student discipline and mental health, declined to talk with the Statesman about her specific interactions with Kohberger, now 28, who is charged with the four students’ murders last fall. Instead, she spoke at that time about the general circumstances that could lead to students’ removal against their preference from the technical school’s law enforcement program, which had heightened requirements.

“Ultimately, what had him removed from the program, when I look back on it now, makes sense,” Carmella-Beers told “The Idaho Massacre” podcast in light of the allegations. “Not knowing what I know, then yeah, you’d be like, ‘I can’t — I’m so shocked.’ And in that respect I am, but then I know another little piece, which is the piece that occurred at the school. And so then, I’m like, ‘Oh, but see, that makes sense.’ ”

The four U of I students were stabbed to death at an off-campus home on King Road in Moscow in November. They were seniors Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves, each 21; and junior Xana Kernodle and freshman Ethan Chapin, each 20.

Reached by email, Carmella-Beers did not make herself available Tuesday in response to a Statesman interview request.

Kohberger is featured in a photo in Pleasant Valley High School’s yearbook from his sophomore year wearing a police-like uniform and doing a pushup while still enrolled in the law enforcement program. Kohberger aimed to become an Army Ranger, the photo’s caption read, but his primary interest was law enforcement, his former friend, Thomas Arntz, told the Statesman earlier this year.

After being booted from the law enforcement focus and a year into the HVAC program, Kohberger chose not to attend the technical school for his senior year, Carmella-Beers told the podcast. He instead completed his diploma requirements through Pleasant Valley’s online program, telling Arntz’s sister, Casey Arntz, in March 2013 that he finished high school early, the Statesman previously reported.

But Carmella-Beers recalled that pursuing law enforcement was Kohberger’s dream, she told the podcast.

“The reason that I remember his application was because of the way the guidance counselor just really played it up, how it was all he wanted,” Camella-Beers said, acknowledging the impact on him of getting kicked out. “So my feeling was that he was defeated, you know, because it’s the only thing he ever wanted in life, and you have it, and now that’s falling through.”

Donna Yozwiak, Kohberger’s guidance counselor for most of high school, confirmed to the Statesman “how excited” he was for the technical school’s law enforcement focus.

“He wanted to explore that line of work as a possible career choice,” Yozwiak said by email. “Many students switch career paths. I was surprised, however, when he left MCTI in his senior year.”

School complaint leads to investigation

Warning signs emerged after Kohberger joined the law enforcement program at the county’s technical program, Carmella-Beers said in the podcast interview.

“There were some circumstances that led us to believe that maybe there were going to be some difficulties in Bryan’s life that weren’t going to … contribute to him having an easy time of it,” she said. “Just, it wasn’t going to be just ending up in the police academy kind of thing for him. It was going to be a little bit more of a challenge for him to get there.”

She described a complaint being made, a teacher bringing it to Carmella-Beers’ attention, and that leading to an investigation of the incident. Kohberger and other students were interviewed in the process, she said, and a decision was made about his future in the law enforcement program — “whether it’s the decision the student wants or not.”

“I don’t think that maybe he necessarily grasped the depth and breadth of the issue at hand,” she told the podcast. “So I think there was frustration as to not really understanding — ‘I don’t understand what the problem is. This is not a big deal,’ or, you know, ‘This didn’t happen.’ … It was just like, ‘Seriously?’ kind of thing.”

High school also is when Kohberger began using heroin, the Arntzes and another of his former friends, Jack Baylis, previously told the Statesman in interviews. Addiction issues eventually led Kohberger to drug rehab.

In February 2014, at 19 years old, Kohberger was arrested and charged with misdemeanor theft, ABC News reported in the podcast “The King Road Killings.” Kohberger had recently returned from rehab and was living back with his family, his father told police, according to court records obtained by ABC, and allegedly stole his older sister’s cellphone and sold it at a local mall.

Before ABC’s report, Kohberger had no known criminal record leading up to his December arrest in the student homicide investigation. Kohberger served no jail time, ABC reported, and there is no public record of Kohberger’s arrest or the result of that case.

In May 2018, Kohberger told Baylis in a Facebook message, first reported by The New York Times and reviewed by the Statesman, that he hadn’t used drugs in two years. By that time, Kohberger was attending Northampton Community College in eastern Pennsylvania and graduated that year with a major in psychology. He then transferred to DeSales University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in 2020.

From 2016 to 2021, Kohberger also was employed as a weekend security officer at the Pleasant Valley School District, where his parents also worked, the Statesman previously reported. He resigned from the position in June 2021, according to district employment records obtained through a public records request.

George Curcio, a former New York City officer who was Kohberger’s security supervisor, previously told the Statesman he didn’t remember ever receiving a complaint about Kohberger during his years working at the district.

“Yeah, he seemed a little odd, but nothing I ever picked up on, and didn’t seem like a violent person or anything like that,” Curcio said by phone in April.

When Kohberger resigned from the school district, Curcio said Kohberger told him he planned to go back to school full time. Kohberger finished a master’s at DeSales in June 2022 and eventually left Pennsylvania for a Ph.D. in the criminal justice and criminology department at Washington State University in Pullman, Washington, roughly 9 miles away from Moscow.

Kohberger faces four counts of first-degree murder and one count of felony burglary. In an alibi filing earlier this month, Kohberger’s public defender said he was out driving his car alone, as he long had a habit of doing, overnight from Nov. 12 to Nov. 13, at the time of the student slayings.

His trial is scheduled to start Oct. 2 in Latah County. Prosecutors announced in June that they intend to seek the death penalty if Kohberger is convicted.

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