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911 Ruf published in the case of the University of Idaho Student Murden, but how? And why now?

A 911 call recording in which the four students from the University of Idaho were murdered in their house outside the campus was not published by the Court, so that Idahonews.com wanted to find out where it came from.

On November 13, 2022, a young woman called 911 Dispatch cry and said: “Something happened in our house, we don't know what.” This call would lead to the discovery of the murders of Xana Kernodle, Ethan Chapin, Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen. The caller is one of two survivors roommate who also lived in the house in the King RD.

On Friday, Kxly released the full recording in Spokane for the first time. Idahonews.com gave the judicial building of Ada County an application for public records to receive our own copy of the recording, but it was quickly announced that the judge's call was interrupted under Seehelie and was not released by the court.

Kxly, the New York Times, and the Washington Post were named in court documents in a complaint to facilitate Whitcom 911. Whitcom 911 is the agency that offers 911 shipping services in Moscow, Idaho and Pullman, Washington. Whitcom 911 applied for a relief in which numerous attempts by the various agencies to obtain a recording of the 911 call, and argued that a recently set up by Bryan Kohberger recently set up a transcription of the call made the Audio recording under Seehound to keep.

A judge in Whitman County agreed and allowed Whitcom 911 to publish the recording. Kaylee Goncalves' family published an explanation shortly after public admission and said: “The 911 call? It is not the neatly rehearsed dialogue of a well-made story, not the polished performance that one could expect from a Hollywood script. Brutally honestly, it cuts deeper than anything that could develop fiction.”

Bryan Kohberger should be on trial in August. He faces the death penalty if he is convicted.