Judge Steven Hippler did not render any decisions, but two days of hearings revealed new information in the Idaho student murders case against Bryan Kohberger.
Idaho murders suspect Bryan Kohberger will return to court for the first time in more than two months to argue for excluding nearly all evidence collected by police.
Steve Goncalves, father of victim Kaylee Goncalves, expressed cautious optimism about the legal proceedings while emphasizing the importance of justice.
Idaho’s U.S. senators introduced a bill in Congress this week to ban critical race theory in education, even though the topic is already prohibited in Idaho and at least 17 other states, according to EdWeek.
WalletHub says Idaho achieved its ranking “in part due to the success it’s had in decreasing deaths on the road.” But there’s a catch.
Criminals will no longer be able to hide in America’s schools and churches to avoid arrest,” a Homeland Security spokesperson said in a statement.
A state legislative committee has advanced a resolution asking that the power to regulate marriage be returned to the states.
Attorneys for Bryan Kohberger, the Monroe County man charged with the murders of four University of Idaho students, are asking a judge to throw out most of the evidence in the case.
The resolution still has to be adopted by the state's GOP-controlled full House and Senate before a formal request can be sent to the Supreme Court.
Kohberger's lawyer said the roommate told police she had been drinking and that she also heard one of the victims come up and down the stairs during the time of the attack.
The Executive Order SPEED stands for Strategic Permitting, Efficiency, and Economic Development. According to a press release from the Idaho Office of the Governor, the goal of the order is to get better at coordinating state permitting that promotes energy independence.
"When I got to the steps, they knocked me down, stepped on my head, pulled out my shoulder, broke my glasses, I was not breathing," Hemphill said. "If it wasn't for the Capitol Police Officers, I wouldn't be here 'cause I couldn't breathe. They pulled me up and put me behind them."