The families of the four University of Idaho students murdered in 2022 have sued a nearby university whereconfessed killer Bryan Kohbergerwas a graduate student at the time.
In a lawsuit filed in Washington Superior Court, the families of the slain University of Idaho students — Madison Mogen, 21; Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20 — accuse Washington State University of negligence and violating Title IX.
The victims' families argued that the university, located just across Idaho's border with Washington state, failed to take meaningful action after receiving complaints about Kohberger, at the time a criminology graduate student. They called the murders "a foreseeable — and, in fact, predictable — tragedy."
"This effort is not about vengeance or speculation," the families' legal team said in a statement. "This is about ensuring that institutions entrusted with the safety of young people take threats seriously and act decisively when warning signs are present."
WSU did not immediately return a request for comment, buttold The New York Timesin a statement that the university's "hearts remain with the families and friends impacted by this horrific tragedy."
The lawsuit claims that the university received 13 formal complaints about Kohberger's "inappropriate, predatory and menacing behavior."
"Kohberger's discriminatory and harassing behavior was so extreme, pervasive and objectively offensive that female classmates would flee the classroom in the middle of instruction, leaving their possessions behind," the suit states. "Female students, staff and faculty felt threatened and scared by his aggressive staring, looming behind them and uncomfortably close, physically blocking their exit, and following them to their vehicles necessitating routine security escorts."
The victims' families said WSU's response to Kohberger's behavior was "negligent."
In November 2022, the four college studentswere found stabbed to death in an off-campus homein the small community of Moscow, Idaho. Mogen, Goncalves and Kernodle were housemates. Chapin was dating Kernodle and sleeping over for the night.
Over a month later, Kohberger — then a 28-year-old doctoral student at nearby WSU — was arrested in Pennsylvania. Authorities tied Kohberger to the killings using DNA evidence, video surveillance and cellphone data.
Kohberger took a plea deal in July, avoiding the death penalty in exchange for a life sentence. That same month, he was sentenced to four consecutive life sentences for four counts of first-degree murder and 10 years in prison for a burglary charge.