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Kohberger’s team: Autism should negate Idaho death penalty. Experts say it’s a stretch

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Bryan Kohberger, who is accused of killing four University of Idaho students in November 2022, walks past a video display as he enters a courtroom in Latah County for a hearing two years ago. Ted S. Warren AP/Pool

Bellingham Herald, April 2025

Attorneys for Moscow murder suspect Bryan Kohberger, in their latest attempt to avoid capital punishment for their client if he is convicted, have asked the judge to consider setting a new legal precedent in Idaho regarding how autism is classified in death penalty cases.

The 30-year-old’s public defense team asked 4th District Judge Steven Hippler to remove consideration of the death penalty, and its motion hinges on the premise that a U.S. Supreme Court ruling on intellectual disabilities should be expanded to include people with autism spectrum disorder. That 2002 decision concluded that people with severe intellectual impairment must be exempt from a death sentence.

Continue reading at Belingham Herald.

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