Posted on 12/20/2022 6:17:51 PM PST by Tired of Taxes
Police in Moscow, Idaho, were called to Kaylee Goncalves, Maddie Mogen, and Xana Kernodle's home just two months before their murders, RadarOnline.com has learned.
Newly released bodycam footage showed law enforcement arriving at the scene on September 1 after being called about a noise complaint. Cops were met at the front door of the murder home by students who claimed none of the roommates were home at the time.
The footage gives chilling insight as to how many people could have had the door code to get into the home, backing up claims it was a party house.
Loud music could be heard as cops approached the off-campus property that would later become the scene of the three roommates and Xana's boyfriend Ethan Chapin's brutal deaths.
Several young partygoers were also spotted outside. When police knocked on the front door, officers were met by a blonde female who claimed she "could go get" the people that live there before closing the door.
However, that's not what happened.
After spending several moments in the cold, one cop yelled "we're only here for a noise complaint" and instructed partygoers to "open the damn door." Responding officers were greeted by two young males, with one of the boys claiming he couldn't locate any of the roommates.
"No one's here that lives here," he told police. When asked where they went, the man responded: "I have no clue," before his pal claimed, "they left and went to some other party."
One of the boys, who said he lived across the street, alleged he didn't know who lived inside the home, saying, "I think it's mainly females." The males then stated they would try to get the names and phone numbers of the roommates so cops could call them.
(Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
So is the prime suspect now the neighbor that couldn’t stand the loud parties?
Raises the suspicion the killings may have been drug related.
"It's definitely an old, creaky house," said Cole Alteneder, who graduated in 2022 and lived in the house during his junior year. "You can't walk up any of the stairs or on any of the floors without everybody in the house knowing it."
The neighborhood and this house have a "very active party life," Alteneder said. "A lot of students are very familiar with the inside of the home," he said. "At parties, people would hop the fence and just, like, walk away if the cops came," he added.
The Oregon white Elantra was not the right make but not the right car. The owner had been in an accident and left with the plates. The car had nothing to do with the Idaho case.
There was some misinformation put out by internet analysts claiming the car was linked to the case that spread some at first. There was also a homeless man sleeping in the car when the car’s sighting was called in, who then left it.
thanks.
does appear to me to be drug related.
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