The audio of a 911 call made after four university students from the Idaho University were fatally stabbed the survivors’ panic while fighting for understanding what happened.
The 911 audio call made on the morning of November 13, 2022 was obtained by NBC News on Friday, approximately two weeks after the transcription of the call in judicial documents.
The first person on the phone seems to be panic and cry before another woman provides the direction of the rented house outside the campus in King Road in Moscow, Idaho.
“One of the roommates who passed out and was drunk last night, and is not waking up,” the woman tells the dispatcher. “Ah, and saw a man at home last night.”
Another woman takes the phone and the people they call seem to verify someone. The audio captured the rapid breathing of a person who called that they sound like they were terrified.
Then you can listen to a man saying: “salt, salt, salt.”
A dispatcher then asks: “Are you breathing?” And a man replies: “No.”
The dispatcher asks if he has a defibrillator at home, he is told yes and was prepared to instructions when the police seem to have arrived. The call ends shortly after.
The transcription of the call was included in a motion presented on February 24 when prosecutors tried to include it in the trial of the accused murderer, Bryan Kohberger.
Prosecutors say that Kohberger, 30, fatally stabbed Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin in Moscow’s house in November 2022.
He has been accused of four first degree murder positions and a robbery charge. A judge declared himself innocent in his name.
A reason is still clear in the murders.
Kohberger’s trial has been scheduled for August 11. Prosecutors have said they will look for the death penalty.