incident mental health support. honestly, what s going on? greg: i would like to beat out those students. this isn t like hyde park where people gather to shout at each other for three. this is one of the nation s top schools, these are grad students, and there dean, and they are all freaking morons. this is the cream of the crop and the crop has locusts. this is happening everywhere. it is a mentality, why are institutions failing? because anger causes you to fail and then fail, fail and cause you to get angry, so it is this constant loop that people are in. what a crybaby. why is he here? shut up. i can t wait to see you in a courtroom and you start complaining to the judge about something, he is going to go, shut up, you big baby, get out of here. learned that lesson. dana: emily, how about the students who wore masks in the hallway to try to look extra menacing? emily: keep in mind, this
The Graduate and Professional Student Assembly discussed and voted on proposals and resolutions to address rising costs of parking and installing Plan B vending machines on campus.
Whatever the TUGSA bargaining committee is claiming after the vote, it worked hand-in-glove with the campus administration in a bid to ram the contract down strikers’ throats. In response, graduate students must take the initiative into their own hands.
the apartment for that entire time. mike: dan, i m curious if you ve encountered any folks and talked to them about this guy living there and his potential connection to crime? any reaction from people on the ground? reporter: yeah. everyone s shocked who lived in this complex. they didn t really know him, he kind of kept to himself. one person who lives below him says he was noisy at, like, 1:00 in the morning, so she was going to complain to him but didn t really know him. this is a complex that is largely filled with people who are grad students, even some young families, so they kind of keep to themselves, so not many people knew him specifically, but they re shocked by this arrest of someone so close to them the, mike. mike: dan springer live from pullman, washington, thanks very much. for the more on this i m joined by former d.c. homicide detective and fox news contributor williams. ted, welcome. thanks, mike. mike: so we expect the suspect toway his extradition rights
today i learned investigators had only locked in on bryan christopher kohberger a few days ago but a police source said genetic genealogy played a key role in pointing them to bryan christopher kohberger. that means they must have had dna from the killer left at this crime scene to match it to the dna of a family member. learning more about this and other evidence they had against bryan christopher kohberger when he was extradited to idaho to face counts of first-degree murder. haven t been able to learn much about bryan christopher kohberger from people at this apartment complex because it is fairly vacant as people are still on break. they don t start for another week or so in washington state. this is university housing for most grad students. we understand there are a lot of families here. molly: a lot of curiosity about his connection to the victims. rich: prosecutors charge 28-year-old bryan christopher