Boys, Idaho – A judge in the state of Idaho stops some of the graphic photos taken by the investigators after that Brian Cuperger Four students of Idahu University were killed in 2022.
I made the second boycott judge, Megan Marshall Ruling Wednesday, saying that publishing the “incredible annoying” images on the Internet – as the families of the victims may see them unintentionally – is an unjustified invasion of personal privacy.
Moscow has ordered the exit from the parts of the images that show any part of the bodies of the victims or blood surrounding them immediately.
But the judge said that the public also has an interest in seeing the investigation records, and therefore other photos, videos and documents related to the case can be released, including videos that show the stunning friends of the victims in the morning whose bodies were found.
Cuperger was He was sentenced to life imprisonment without conditional release In July to Appeal crimes From Kaylee Goncalvest, Xana Kernodle, Madison Magen and Ethan Chapin at a tenant house outside the campus in Moscow, Idaho.
The family members of the two victims, Magen and Chapin, asked the judge to keep parts of the crime scene images and videos hidden from the general show, saying that the pictures are invasive and shocked.
The criminal case drew attention all over the world, and the Moscow Police Department received hundreds of requests to issue investigation records. IDaho law generally allows the removal records to be raised as soon as the criminal investigation is completed.
after Cuperger In the ruling, the city of Moscow responded to one of these requests to public records by launching some of the photos and videos taken by law enforcement at the crime scene, which led to the lack of clarity of the dead students of the dead students, as well as the faces of the victims and other witnesses who spoke to the police outside the home.
“There is not much that the audience earns in seeing the bodies of the deceased, soaked blood leaves, blood photography, or other pictures of his death,” Marshall wrote.
“The truth remains: the investigation of the murder and the criminal case has been closed.” “The issuance of these records will have a simple impact on those who are still confused or installed on unimportant plots while they have a profound impact on their loved ones.”