
Idaho Murders: When Social Media Becomes the Crime Scene
How a billion-view hashtag led to wrongful accusations, harassment, and lessons in digital vigilantism
On November 13, 2022, at approximately 4:00 AM, four University of Idaho students—Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; Madison Mogen, 21; and Ethan Chapin, 20—were stabbed to death in an off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho. The brutal crime shocked the nation. What followed online was equally disturbing: a digital frenzy that would permanently damage the lives of innocent people and expose the dangers of crowdsourced criminal investigation.
Bryan Kohberger, a Ph.D. student in criminal justice and criminology at Washington State University, was eventually arrested and charged with the murders. He entered not guilty pleas. But long before his arrest, social media had already conducted its own trial.
## The Misinformation Machine
The #IdahoMurders hashtag accumulated over a billion views as online sleuths spun competing narratives. False theories proliferated: drug overdose, robbery gone wrong, random suspects from visiting football fans. A man captured in food truck footage wearing a white hoodie became an unofficial suspect in the court of social media opinion—his image shared endlessly, his life upended by speculation.
The investigation itself revealed the extent of digital activity in the case. Search warrants were obtained for Kohberger's Reddit, Google, and TikTok accounts. Investigators examined victims' Snapchat accounts. Kohberger had previously posted a Reddit survey about emotions and psychological traits that influence decision-making in crime—a detail that online communities seized upon as damning evidence.
But armchair detectives weren't scrutinizing just the accused. They were also targeting innocent people.
## Collateral Damage
A local University of Idaho professor was falsely labeled a suspect. He received cease-and-desist letters and faced threats and harassment that forced him to reckon with permanent damage to his reputation. Other innocent professors, students, and community members were similarly implicated by social media speculation.


