Idaho murders: Cops looking for 'all outside surveillance' during three-hour window to solve puzzling crime
Warning: This article contains a recollection of crime and can be triggering to some, readers' discretion advised.
MOSCOW, IDAHO: Detectives are baffled by the four-hour gap in the timeline of the final hours of two of the victims, Xana Kernodle and her lover Ethan Chapin, in the University of Idaho murder case. Kernodle and Chapin were among the four students who were found brutally killed in their off-campus home on November 13.
With no suspect in the case, the Moscow Police are now curious as to where Kernodle and Chapin, both 20 years old, had been from around 9 pm on November 12 until 1.45 am on November 13. In a statement released on Tuesday, December 6, Moscow detectives stated, "Any interactions, contacts, direction and method of travel, or anything abnormal could add context to what occurred," reported The Sun. The allegations that Kaylee Goncalves had a stalker before she was murdered were also addressed by police on Tuesday, December 6. "Using tips and leads, investigators have identified an incident involving Kaylee at a local business, which may have been the stalker reference she made to friends and family," the police said.