Bryan Kohberger Idaho Murder Update
The University of Idaho is offering the Innovative Agriculture and Marketing Partnership (IAMP), which is a program that provides grants to farmers. The $31 million program seeks to offer financial incentives to various farmers.
Every year, people of African descent gather together in Switzerland as part of a United Nations Human Rights Training Program.
Prosecutors can continue to pursue the death penalty against Bryan Kohberger, the man accused of killing four University of Idaho students in their off-campus home in 2022, a judge has ruled. The Idaho judge’s decision to deny defense motions relating to the death penalty is among the latest developments ahead of the trial,
Today both groups signed a five-year strategic understanding for premier education and research, or 'SUPER' agreement. U of I's nuclear engineering program has partnered with the INL since 1954. The expanded partnership means that university faculty can work with the INL on projects for years to come.
Attorneys for defendant Bryan Kohberger contend most of the evidence in the case hinges on an unconstitutional genetic investigation process.
Steve Goncalves, father of victim Kaylee Goncalves, expressed cautious optimism about the legal proceedings while emphasizing the importance of justice.
If you're going to go to college—or send your child to college—you want to choose the best one. But what exactly that means is different for each person. There are a lot of factors, including how big the college is both overall and in terms of class sizes.
A University of Idaho-led program offering technical and financial assistance to Idaho farmers and ranchers who adopt climate-smart agricultural practices has opened for a second enrollment period.
Arguments resume Friday, as Kohberger faces a trial set to begin in August. He is accused of killing Madison Mogen, 21; Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20 on Nov. 13, 2022.
President "Trump had a particularly significant impact on the 9th Circuit" in his first term, moving the reliably liberal appeals court to the right. That could influence abortion policy in the West.
BOISE, ID — Pamela Hemphill, 71, known as the “MAGA Granny” in news headlines, openly rejected Trump’s pardon, according to a New York Times last week., quoting Hemphill doubling down stating, “Absolutely not.”