The Idaho Murders | The Case Against Bryan Kohberger Podcast By True Crime Today cover art

The Idaho Murders | The Case Against Bryan Kohberger

The Idaho Murders | The Case Against Bryan Kohberger

By: True Crime Today
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Get ready for a true-crime podcast that will leave you questioning everything with its relentless focus on the capture and prosecution of Bryan Kohbeger - the man accused of committing a quadruple homicide in Moscow, Idaho, involving the brutal murder of four innocent college students he allegedly didn't even know. We'll leave no stone unturned as we explore the dark depths of Kohbeger's mind, asking the most haunting question of all - what drove him to commit such a heinous act? With every episode of the Idaho Murders Podcast, we'll bring you riveting reporting, in-depth discussions, and the latest breaking updates on the case against Kohbeger. Join us as we seek answers and uncover the chilling truth that lurks beneath the surface of this baffling crime. Will justice be served? We'll keep you on the edge of your seat until the very end. Don't miss out on the most riveting true-crime storytelling you'll ever experience.True Crime Today Biographies & Memoirs Politics & Government True Crime
Episodes
  • Bryan Kohberger Case Finale: The Psychology Of "I Should Have Seen It Coming"
    Mar 28 2026

    Of course. That's the reaction multiple people reportedly had when Bryan Kohberger's name appeared in connection with the murders of Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, Madison Mogen, and Kaylee Goncalves. Not shock. Something closer to grim recognition. A clarity that felt like it had always been there. Except it hadn't — not in that form. The certainty arrived after. The brain built it from what was already there. And the difference between what people actually had before and what it feels like they had in hindsight is the question this finale is built around.

    Part Five of The Shape of Him examines hindsight bias in the context of the Kohberger case — the documented neurological process by which the brain constructs a clear warning arc after a catastrophic event that felt genuinely ambiguous while it was happening. One of the most replicated findings in cognitive psychology. And one with profound implications for how we think about warning signs, prevention, and the guilt that follows when we realize we felt something and didn't know what to do with it.

    Host Tony Brueski also examines what prediction of targeted violence actually requires — and what the research says about our real capacity for it. Then closes the series with the honest reckoning this five-part journey has been building toward: the gap between what we can sense and what we can do, and what it costs to live in it.

    The complete Shape of Him series is available now. Series finale.

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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #BryanKohberger #TrueCrimePsychology #IdahoMurders #HiddenKillers #HindsightBias #TrueCrime #MoscowIdaho #TheShapeOfHim #CriminalPsychology #TrueCrimeCommunity

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    18 mins
  • Bryan Kohberger's Profile Fits Millions — Here's What It Costs The Innocent Ones
    Mar 27 2026

    After Bryan Kohberger's arrest, a profile was assembled from the characteristics that defined his public presentation: awkward, isolated, intensely focused on criminal psychology, difficult to be around, socially misaligned. And that profile — built to explain something monstrous — describes an enormous population of people who are not monstrous. Who are living harmless lives. Some of whom are watching this right now and feeling a recognition that has nothing to do with violence and everything to do with identity.

    Part Four of The Shape of Him examines what it costs to be those people. To know you fit a description and have no way to prove the description doesn't apply to you. To be monitored by people who won't say directly what they suspect. To carry the weight of a label assembled around someone else's alleged act.

    Host Tony Brueski makes the case that the Kohberger profile is not a fingerprint — it is a smudge that covers a vast population. The false positive rate in behavioral profiling is not a rounding error. It is the whole problem. And the cost of that problem falls almost entirely on people who will never cross any line.

    This episode also speaks directly to the true crime audience — what their engagement with this content says about them, and why the answer is not what they might fear. Part four of five. Subscribe for the full series.

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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #BryanKohberger #TrueCrimePsychology #IdahoMurders #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #ProfileBurden #TheShapeOfHim #WomenAndTrueCrime #MoscowIdaho #CriminalPsychology

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    16 mins
  • Bryan Kohberger: Why The People Who Sensed Danger Couldn't Do Anything About It
    Mar 26 2026

    They felt it. The delivery driver. The classmates. The graduate students at WSU who described a texture of discomfort around Bryan Kohberger they couldn't point to directly. Multiple people, across multiple years, all describing variations of the same experience — something that registered in the body before the brain had language for it. Something real. Something with nowhere to go.

    Part Three of The Shape of Him examines the gap between what people felt around Kohberger and what any system could do with what they felt. The neuroscience behind social threat detection — why the instinct is genuine, and why it's also imprecise enough to be unable to function as evidence. The specific thresholds of every institution he passed through — mandatory reporting, university threat assessment, HR, mental health providers, law enforcement — and why at every level, discomfort without a documented incident wasn't enough.

    Host Tony Brueski makes the case directly: the systems that didn't flag Bryan Kohberger are the same systems that protect all of us from being acted on based on someone else's discomfort. That is genuinely uncomfortable given what allegedly happened. It is also genuinely true.

    For anyone carrying guilt about a feeling they couldn't act on. For anyone who works in a system and has hit its limits. This episode is for both of you. Part three of five.

    Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/

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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #BryanKohberger #TrueCrimePsychology #IdahoMurders #HiddenKillers #GutInstinct #TrueCrime #MoscowIdaho #TheShapeOfHim #WomensIntuition #TrueCrimeCommunity

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    17 mins
All stars
Most relevant
So I like the story line and how they have organized but I had to stop listening due to the amount of commercials. 3 to 7 minutes of the same repetitive ads ruined the whole podcast for me. I listen to podcasts while I’m working and doing school work. A little less monetizing would probably put this podcast further.

The amount of commercials on this make it very hard to listen to

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What is that woman talking about? Biased and not informed. Don't recommend. Waste of time.

Avoid Those Losers

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I am very interested in hearing information about this case, but this podcast does not deliver anything but tobs if advertising.

More advertising than content!

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the police and college. has anyone thought maybe this was a grand plan against the very ones that didn't pick him for the job he tried out for? just saying and also the professor shouldnt have said she would actually study him for her career....that's a conflict of interest and prob not the best ethical thing. this is why it's about the killer when this stuff happens because people play into them it should be about the 4. he should suffer.

my opinion

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