Idaho murders: Reporter Brian Entin suggests killer entered and exited from back door of students' house

Idaho murders: Reporter Brian Entin suggests killer entered and exited from back door of students' house
Brian Entin thinks killer(s) of students of University of Idaho used back side of the house to come and go (Instagram/@kayleegoncalves, ABC screengrab and NewsNation screengrab)

This article is based on sources and MEAWW cannot verify this information independently. 

MOSCOW, IDAHO: Over a month has passed since the quadruple University of Idaho murders, however, no significant breakthrough has been made by investigators yet. Law enforcement officials are still reportedly struggling to find any suspect in the killings in the early hours of November 13.

Since then several speculations and theories have been doing the rounds on the web regarding the suspect(s) possible way of entering and exiting the house, where the lives of Ethan Chapin, Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves and Xana Kernodle were cut short. It has been said that the house was quite close to the campus.

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Until now, many reports have said that the killer possibly entered the house from the front door. Also, some earlier reports have claimed that there were no signs of any force or break-in at the residence; a neighbor added that the front door was open hours after the crime happened.

But NewsNation senior reporter Brian Entin has another theory regarding the murders as he has suggested that chances are the killer used the back area to enter the house. He added that after committing the crime, the killer escaped from the rear side while a vehicle might have been waiting for them. Since the area behind the house is surrounded by trees without much video surveillance, and since it was dark, it might have been easy for the culprit to flee without being noticed, Entin reportedly added.

This comes as one of the slain students’ family has shared their fear that they would never know who killed the four youngsters, given the slow probe. Kaylee Goncalves’ mother Kristi told TODAY, “I can’t help but not. I mean, in all honesty, that is a possibility. There’s a lot of unsolved murders.”

She continued, “It’s sleepless nights. It’s feeling sick to your stomach. It's so many emotions that I’ve never, ever endured in my life, ever,” before recalling the unfortunate day when she got to know about the killings. The mother revealed, “There was nothing you could do. Absolutely nothing. We were just running around for hours just not knowing what was going on, what happened, because we found out by people calling us. And the sheriff showed up about three hours later.”

Kristi also added, “We’re a month in and that’s all we got. I have to have hope, I have to have faith. I have to trust God that it’s in the right hands, and that the right people are doing it — the right people are leaving the investigation. I have no choice.”

Meanwhile, a PR officer for the Moscow Police Department, Robbie Johnson, has reportedly said that “we’re in a really good place in this investigation where we have a lot of leads, a lot of places to go as far as investigation. We have a lot more to do, but we’ve collected a lot of evidence, and we’re continuing to move forward with that.”