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Judge rules for University of Idaho murder victims' families in fight over crime scene photos

Kevin Fixler and Alex Brizee, The Idaho Statesman on

Published in News & Features

BOISE, Idaho — Two families whose college-aged children were killed among four University of Idaho students in a highly publicized attack in Moscow obtained a partial victory in their legal fight to prevent the release of crime scene photos through public records requests.

Second Judicial District Judge Megan Marshall agreed with the parents of student victims Madison Mogen and Ethan Chapin in her ruling that they possess privacy rights over the images of their deceased children. But the law also does not extend absolute protections that entirely outweigh the public’s right to know, she wrote in her decision Wednesday.

“There is little to be gained by the public in seeing the decedents’ bodies, the blood-soaked sheets, blood spatter or other death scene depictions,” Marshall said in her written opinion. “Whereas the dissemination of these images across the internet and in public spheres where plaintiffs may come upon them by happenstance, as has already occurred, causing them extreme emotional distress is an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.”

Crime scene photos from inside the two rooms of the King Road home where the four students were fatally stabbed, with redactions, were already disclosed by the city of Moscow, in response to public records requests. In following the Idaho Public Records Act, the city can continue to release such images, Marshall wrote, but will be required under her order to further redact those images to meet the demands of the families who sued the city.

Karen and Scott Laramie, Mogen’s mother and stepfather, filed the civil lawsuit and were later joined by Chapin’s parents, Stacy and Jim Chapin, and their daughter Maizie Chapin. Both families were represented by Coeur d’Alene-based attorney Leander James.

Mogen, 21, and Chapin, 20, were killed in November 2022 along with friends and fellow U of I undergraduates Kaylee Goncalves, 21, and Xana Kernodle, 20. The man responsible, Bryan Kohberger, 30, pleaded guilty in July to the four murders and was sentenced to four consecutive life terms in prison, with no chance of parole or ability to appeal.

 

Kohberger, at the time a Ph.D. student of criminal justice and criminology at nearby Washington State University in Pullman, Washington, was arrested and charged with the crime in late December 2022. The nearly seven-week investigation and almost two and a half-year court case that followed garnered global attention. Kohberger entered the Idaho prison system on July 23 after his sentencing hearing.

“The fact remains: The murder investigation and the criminal case are closed. Releasing these records will have minor effect upon those who continue to be perplexed by the facts or fixated on unfounded conspiracies whereas it has and will continue to have profound effect upon the decedents’ loved ones,” Marshall wrote. “The city may disclose the investigatory records in this matter, but must black out any areas within the images, photographs, video, or other media that depict any portion of the decedents or their bodies and the blood immediately surrounding them.”

Steve Goncalves, father of victim Kaylee Goncalves, praised Marshall’s decision.

“We are immensely proud of Karen Laramie standing up for what is right,” Goncalves said in a text to the Idaho Statesman. “It’s regrettable that families must turn to lawyers and legal battles to safeguard the dignity of their murdered loves ones, which once again erodes the rights that were stripped from our children.”

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©2025 The Idaho Statesman. Visit idahostatesman.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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