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We Got This Covered
We Got This Covered
William Kennedy

Idaho 4: There’s now only one plausible explanation for who Pappa Rodger was

In the aftermath of Bryan Kohberger’s July 23, 2025, sentencing for the murders of four University of Idaho students, prosecutors have clarified a key mystery: the so‑called “Pappa Rodger” Facebook account.

What was the “Pappa Rodger” account?

Shortly after the November 2022 slayings of Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, Madison Mogen, and Ethan Chapin, an anonymous user, “Pappa Rodger,” joined large true‑crime Facebook groups about the case. The account posted eerily accurate details: predicting the discovery of a knife sheath, offering diagrams of the King Road home, and asserting the killer wasn’t among the victims’ circle, insights unavailable to the public at that time.

The account vanished shortly after Kohberger’s December 30, 2022, arrest, sparking speculation that the killer had used it to anonymously infiltrate online discussions, taunt true-crime sleuths, and subtly insert himself into the investigation.

At Kohberger’s sentencing hearing, the Idaho State Police and prosecuting attorneys categorically dismissed any connection between Kohberger and “Pappa Rodger.” They stated they had “looked into every bit of it” and found no connection whatsoever.

Given the lack of a link to Kohberger and the account’s disappearance after his arrest, another plausible explanation emerges: authorities themselves may have been behind the avatar, but the truth may never be known.

By appearing as an informed “insider,” law enforcement could manage public speculation, monitor crowdsourced theories, and possibly even flush out leads, including clues to the killer. With no one else stepping forward and no traceable source, this theory holds weight.

Law enforcement had Kohberger in their sights early on

Evidence also now reveals that Idaho law enforcement identified Kohberger as a suspect early in the investigation, raising the possibility that the Pappa Rodger account was created to monitor or draw him out specifically. The avatar even looked like him. Investigators found a knife sheath bearing his DNA, tracked cellphone pings in the area, and obtained online purchase records for a military‑style knife, all within weeks of the November murders.

Prosecutor Bill Thompson noted investigators “worked tirelessly” and found no ties between Kohberger and the victims, nor any social‑media contact, further supporting the possibility “Pappa Rodger” was part of the official investigative apparatus.

Kohberger sentencing

On July 23, 2025, Kohberger pleaded guilty to avoid the death penalty and received four consecutive life sentences, plus 10 years for burglary. Yet he offered no motive or explanation, declining to speak during sentencing. With the ongoing release of documents, investigators confirm there’s no known link between “Pappa Rodger” and Kohberger. The suggestion that “Pappa Rodger” served as a covert tool in the investigation is now the most plausible explanation.

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