DoorDash Driver Says She “Parked Right Next” to Bryan Kohberger on the Night of Murders: Know More Here

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A DoorDash driver will testify at Bryan Kohberger’s forthcoming trial after telling authorities she spotted him the night he is suspected of killing four college students.

When the woman was arrested by Pullman Police Department officers on September 4, 2024, during a traffic stop unconnected to the crime, she made those allegations.

DoorDash Driver Says She "Parked Right Next" to Bryan Kohberger on the Night of Murders: Know More Here
DoorDash Driver Says She “Parked Right Next” to Bryan Kohberger on the Night of Murders: Know More Here

“I’m the DoorDash Driver,” the lady tells the officer who is booking her into jail in body camera footage that PEOPLE was able to get. Bryan was there. I parked directly beside him.

She had told the police just before that, “Now I have to testify in the big murder case, too.”

In response to the officer’s question about which murder case she was referring to, she said, “The murder case of the college girls.”

A nondissemination order prohibiting extrajudicial disclosures about the case prevented police and prosecutors from verifying or refuting the woman’s assertions. But according to court documents, the woman’s initials are the same as those of the DoorDash driver known as M.M.

She and her surviving roommate, who told police she saw Kohberger leave the house that evening, are the only two persons thought to have seen him close to the murder scene.

The probable cause affidavit states that the DoorDash driver delivered a package from Jack in the Box to Xana Kernodle’s Moscow home at 4 a.m.

After killing stabbing four students—Kernodle and her boyfriend Ethan Chapin, both 20; Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen, both 21—the murderer reportedly entered the house a few minutes later and left at 4:20 a.m.

According to the probable cause affidavit, police used surveillance footage of a car that matched Kohberger’s make and model driving to and from the scene, DNA purportedly discovered on a knife sheath, and cell phone location data to connect Kohberger to the murders.

Kohberger’s attorney, Anne Taylor, stated in a motion outlining his alibi that although the suspect was driving alone the night of the killings, he did not murder the four victims.

Following the defense’s successful request for a change of venue, Kohberger’s murder trial is set to start in Ada County on August 11. He might receive the death penalty if found guilty. One week before the trial begins, on August 4, jury selection will get underway.

When Kohberger was arrested in Pennsylvania, he told his public defender that he expected to be found not guilty at trial. A not guilty plea was filed on his behalf after he refused to enter a plea when the judge formally charged him with four counts of murder.

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