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August 21, 2025 14 mins
Bryan Kohberger, who is serving four consecutive life sentences at the Idaho Maximum Security Institution (IMSI), has filed formal complaints detailing verbal threats and sexual harassment shortly after his transfer to J‑Block in late July. In a handwritten note dated July 30, he described being subjected to minute‑by‑minute harassment and asked to be moved to the quieter B‑Block. Five days later, on August 4, he submitted another complaint specifically citing crude sexual remarks from fellow inmates—one allegedly told him, “I’ll b--- f-- you,” while another quipped, “The only a-- we’ll be eating is Kohberger’s.” A guard confirmed hearing vulgar language directed at him, though could not identify the speaker, and Kohberger’s transfer request has been denied, with officials noting he reportedly still “feels safe to remain on tier 2 in J‑Block.”


Beyond these direct threats, reports indicate psychological harassment is already taking a toll. Inmates are reportedly taunting Kohberger continuously—including yelling through the vents in his cell—which has disrupted his sleep and mental well‑being. Despite being housed alone, the relentless nature of the harassment has prompted multiple complaints to prison staff. Authorities have acknowledged the taunting but maintain that security and order are being upheld, stating that verbal interactions among inmates are common and that Kohberger remains in a safe environment..


to contact me:

bobbycapucci@protonmail.com




source:

Kohberger complaints rise in first month of prison in Idaho | Idaho Statesman
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
What's up everyone, and welcome back to the program. In
this episode, we're gonna head back up to Moscow and
we're gonna talk about Brian Cohberger and the fun time
that he's having behind bars. Now. According to reports, Brian
Colberger is facing all kinds of threats from other inmates,
and guess what he deserves every minute of it. I mean,

(00:22):
did he think he was going to be treated like
some kind of superstar. Buddy, You're the biggest kind of pussy,
the biggest kind of coward. You crept into these kids'
house in the middle of the night and killed them
in their sleep. Oh, I'm sure that hardened criminals are
gonna really love you. And some of the threats that
Brian Colberger is getting. Those threats are real. You have

(00:45):
to keep in mind we're talking about people that have
nothing to lose. People in there for multiple murders, you know, life, imprisonment, whatever.
They don't give a fuck. They catch Brian Colberger slipping,
they're gonna pull his punk card. And like I said
from Jump Street, I think it's inevitable that we wake
up to the news one day that Brian Colberger caught
that smoke while behind bars, and I guarantee you that

(01:09):
if and when that ever happens, the person who does
it is going to have a full commissary because people
are going to send him a bunch of dough. My
man's going to be swimming in top rahmin. Today's article
is from the Idaho Statesman and the headline Brian Colberger
alleges he faces minute by minute threats in Idaho prison.
This article was authored by Kevin Fixler, Incarcerated at Idaho's

(01:33):
maximum security prison for less than a month, Brian Colberger
has lodged five formal complaints to correction staff, including over
other prisoners threatening him with sexual assault. Buddy, you're no
longer in your little college classroom. You should have thought
about that before you stab those four kids, especially considering
he admitted to what he did. So I don't give

(01:55):
a fuck what happens to Brian Colberger while he's in prison.
It was up to me, We'd put a GoPro on them.
We'd get a helicopter, we'd fly it over a volcano,
and then we'd push his ass directly into that volcano
while the go pro is running and live stream it
for twenty bucks a clip, then send all the proceeds
to the families. Sounds like a good way to get

(02:16):
rid of people like Brian Colberger to me. But all
kidding aside, there's no doubt that he's going to face
retribution in this prison, and it's something that's been talked
about quite a bit by people in the know. When
you go to prison for this kind of offense, nobody
wants to be around you. Imagine being a selly. You
have to be on guard at all times. This dude's

(02:38):
a sneak attacker. So you're downtying your shoe and Coburger
comes up and shanks you. And don't think for a
minute that folks don't think like that in prison. I mean,
shit's so volatile that they keep their shoes on all
day in case something pops off. The thirty year old
man who confessed to killing four University of Idaho students
in November of twenty twenty two move last month to

(03:00):
this day prison complex South the Boise, just hours after
he was sentenced to consecutive life terms without the chance
for parole. Before Coburger agreed to plead guilty to four
accounts of first degree murder, he awaited trial in police
custody for more than two and a half years, split
between jails in Leta County and Ada County, where he

(03:20):
was said to be a weirdo too. There's a lot
of inmates that we're talking about Brian Colberger and his behavior,
and they were saying that dude's just straight up weird
and there's no doubt about it. We're talking about a
disturbed ass individual. And I don't want to hear about, oh,
his autism, I don't care. He was functioning enough that
he was able to get a degree right, go to college, right,

(03:42):
So save the whole entire autism shit. There's people that
are actually suffering from real autism, you know, debilitating autism,
and when you try and use somebody like Brian Colberger
as some kind of cutout talking about autism, it doesn't
hit the way you think it's going to hit. And
that's why Judge Hipler told them to get stuffed. Plenty
of people out there with autism that don't become mass murderers.

(04:05):
Since arriving on July twenty third to the Idaho Department
of Correction facility, Colberger's stay has been turbulent already. He
asked for transfer to another wing of the prison after
a pair of fellow prisoners warned them of forthcoming sexual violence,
according to state prison public records obtained by The Idaho Statesman,
and I don't think it's a matter of if. I

(04:26):
think it's a matter of when. I don't think there's
any doubt that Brian Colberger is in for it in
that prison. We're talking about a pretty small state. You
mean to tell me that these prisoners weren't watching the news.
They know what's up. How many of them have daughters,
how many of them have sisters, How many of them
have kids that are the age of the Idaho four

(04:48):
A whole hell of a lot of them. And when
they see Brian Colberger's bitch ass, they're gonna want to
get that get back. An IDoc officer was for one
of the comments which threatened Colberger with rape. The comment
towards the admitted mass killer was confirmed, but no further
action was taken because the corrections officer could not positively

(05:11):
identify who said it. He wrote in a report. Yeah, right,
he knows what's up. I can almost guarantee that the
prison officer knows exactly who said it and is just
not going to pony up that information. Why should they?
I highly doubt the guards give a shit one way
or the other about Brian Colberger. Now, look, it'll be
a disaster for them as far as optics if something
happens to him, But I doubt anybody's gonna lose any

(05:33):
sleep over it, nor should they. The prison system has
tried to allay any concerns about perhaps its most high
profile prisoner, and pointed out that he remains in a
cell for a single occupant and is closely watched by
officers when moved for showers and other activities, so he
gets special treatment. You know didn't get special treatment the

(05:55):
Idaho four. So why should Brian Colberger be kept in
solid mary confinement or in ad seg Put that motherfucker
in general population and let him vent for himself. He's
a tough guy, right, he likes to creep around into
people's houses and murder them while they're sleeping. Well, I
want you to meet my friend insert gigantic inmate here,

(06:17):
and I want you to try that shit on him.
Incarcerated individuals commonly communicate with each other in prison, said
Idaho prison spokesperson Sanda Cuztta. Surah Magic in a statement,
Brian Coolberger his house, the lone in a cell and
IDoc staff members maintain a safe and orderly environment for

(06:38):
all individuals in our custody. Well, I'm sure they try to,
but it's prison. Remember, these guys have all data, sit
around and plot how to get somebody we're talking about.
They have twenty four hours a day, seven days a
week to come up with ideas. And you want to
talk about some creative ways to kill people or hurt people, Oh,

(07:00):
prisons were to find them. These guys will turn anything
into a weapon. During Coburger sentencing hearing last month, family
members the sum of the victims told him to expect
to serve a life of hard time, including physical and
possibly even sexual violence visited upon him in prison. I mean,
that's what logic dictates. Right when you go to prison,

(07:20):
there's a very good chance that might happen. And look,
I've never been to prison. I've never even been to jail.
But I have a lot of friends who have been.
I have friends who have done ten fifteen years. I
have one relative behind bars right now who's going to
be serving life. And I promise you all those people
are much harder than Brian Colberger, and every one of

(07:41):
them thought prison was hell. So if they thought prison
was hell, then Brian Colberger is not going to have
a fun time. And guess what, bro deserves everything that's
coming his way, every last bit of it. Now do
I feel empathy for his family? I do. His mom
is dad. They didn't this, right, They weren't the ones

(08:01):
who you know, committed the crime, but unfortunately your son did.
And in the real world there's consequences for that kind
of bullshit. Attorney Ingrid Beaty, formally with the Idaho Attorney
General's Office, helped prosecute Coburger, now a senior Chief Deputy
at the Canyon County Prosecutor's Office. She said in an
interview with The Statesmen that incarcerated people should not face

(08:24):
the threat all physical harm. Well, in a perfect world,
yeah right. I'm not saying that people should face, you know,
harm while they're behind bars, but the reality is what
it is. Obviously, as a prosecutor, as an officer of
the court, I don't condone any violence against anyone. Baty
said that, being said, who among us would even know

(08:44):
how we would respond if we were faced with somebody
who murdered our child. So these family statements are really
just a reflection of the pain and hurt that they
are in, and I think it's completely understandable that they
feel that incredible level of anger. Well yeah, what do
you expect them to do or say, oh, we forgive you,
come over for Thanksgiving dinner, for some kumbaya. I mean,

(09:06):
come on, man, It's all fine and well for dumbasses
to sit on the internet, on Twitter or whatever and
talk bullshit about the Gonsalvees family or any of these families.
They're not the ones living through the nightmare. They're not
the ones that have to wake up every day with
their new reality that their daughter's gone. So save the bullshit.
I don't want to hear it. And that's because all anger,

(09:27):
all rage should be pointed directly where it deserves to
be pointed, and that's with the son of a bitch
who murdered these kids. The four victims were a Madison
Mogan and Kaylee Gonsalvis, both twenty one, and Xana Kernodle
and Ethan Chapin, both twenty The three women held from
North Idaho, and Chapin was from Western Washington. In Coburger's

(09:52):
for six nights in prison. He was held in a
medical transition unit in the Idaho Maximum Security Institution C Block.
As he trans Sford in the prison record showed four
days later, and still lacking an account to the internal
system called pay that grants prisoners access to the commissary,
he filed his first complaint while poor Brian couldn't get

(10:13):
his top, rahmin, what's he going to do? On July
twenty ninth, corrections officials moved Coburger into his cell for
a single occupant in administrative segregation on the second tier
of the two story J Block known as J two.
His first two nights were not without incident. Well that's
a shaka. Coburger did not receive his lunch the day
after his move to his plan long term home, he

(10:36):
wrote in a formal grievance. He also complained that day
about fellow prisoners subjecting him to minute by minute verbal
threats and harassment, which also entailed his new neighbors flooding
his cell. Coburger wrote in residing concern forms, Well, my
guess is the prisoners knew that there was a turd
in that cell, and they just wanted to get some
water in there. To make the process of cleaning it

(10:57):
out a bit easier. Just a few fellows that are
trying to help out, that's all. He suggested that perhaps
another cell block within Max was a better fit. Unit
two of J Block is an environment that I wish
to transfer, from the former PhD student at Washington State University,
scrawled by hand to a deputy warden, I wish to

(11:19):
speak with you soon. Flooding of the cells is relatively
rare in his confines. A high ranking corrections officer assured
Coburger in writing and prison staff considered J Block a
fairly calm and quieter tier. Another area of the prison
would not be any better for him. Captain Brian Crawle added,
give it some time. Oh yeah, give it some time.

(11:41):
I'm sure that the inmates are going to warm up
to you. Food items were also missing on several occasions
from his meal tray and not addressed when Colburger asked.
He asserted, in another grievance, imagine having the audacity you
just murdered four people. You're out here crying because you
didn't get your captain crunch. I wish to, without exception,

(12:02):
received these replacements, wrote the man referred to in the
prison system as resident number one six three two one four.
The nutritional standard is not being upheld unless I receive
my full tray. I'm sure some of the other inmates
would love to supplement that tray with some wiener. On
August twelfth, the prison held a housing placement hearing for

(12:24):
Colberger after he requested protective custody following repeat incidents. On
j blog, he acknowledged that the prison harassment would die
down once news coverage of his murder case slowed down.
The record showed, I doubt it. Everybody knows what this
dude is. Everybody knows the coward he is, and everybody
knows that he's a piece of shit. And when you're

(12:44):
that kind of piece of shit in a prison, you're
a target. And he's real lucky that he's not in
some place like California. Not only would he be greenlit
by the Aran Brotherhood, the Mexican mafia would greenlight his
ass too. Bro would wake up one morning with Popeye
and his cell talking about give me some chon chon
coburger for now, asks that he continued to have recreation

(13:08):
by himself and also be escorted alone, but he also
told the committee that he wants to eventually be allowed
to work and be productive in prison and have shared recreation,
just like another high profile resident on J two does
Coburger said, I'm sure the inmates would love that. Imagine
six foot seven, tattooed from head to toe guy sitting

(13:29):
at a table playing chess and Coburger rolls up talking about, Hey,
can I sit down with you? How quick do you
think everybody's getting up from that table? My guess is
pretty quickly. I don't think anybody in prison is going
to associate with this dude. Nobody who wants that stink
on him. It's like associating with a child molester, right,
just not going to work out for you in prison.

(13:49):
And like I said before, in my opinion, it's not
a matter of if one of these inmates gets their
hands on Brian Colberger, it's a matter of when. All
of the information that goes with this episode can be
found in the description box.
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