Idaho murder victim’s mother finds unexpected peace in killer’s controversial plea deal



The mother of University of Idaho victim Xana Kernodle has broken her silence about a plea deal for the killer, Bryan Kohberger, who pleaded guilty last week to four counts of first-degree murder for killing the 20-year-old, her boyfriend, and two other friends in a home invasion attack.

“At first, I was upset. I felt like I will never get answers now, but now I really see The Lord’s hand in it,” Cara Northington told Fox News Digital. “I now can see that God is protecting us from further torment and trauma.”

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While the plea deal didn’t require Kohberger to explain himself, it puts the case to rest, she said.

“It is truly a blessing,” she added. “The death penalty would give him the opportunity to appeal and drag this horror story out for the rest of our lives.”

Northington said she was on a church retreat with no cell service when the deal became official.

Prosecutors had approached her a week earlier, she said, but she had not met with them.

“I am just thankful I had my church family around me to pray for me, and that I wasn’t back in town, honestly,” she said. “God had me right where he wanted me to be when I found out the news.”

Xana Kernodle was murdered by Bryan Kohberger in her home with three other friends in November 2022. Xana Kernodle
Northington broke her silence on Kohberger’s plea deal, saying: “At first, I was upset. I felt like I will never get answers now, but now I really see The Lord’s hand in it. I now can see that God is protecting us from further torment and trauma.” Facebook/Cara Northington

Kernodle’s birthday would have been Saturday.

Her father separately told the New York Times he disagreed with the deal because it didn’t require the killer to give any answers.

The other victims were Ethan Chapin, 20, Madison Mogen, 21, and Kaylee Goncalves, 21.

Chapin’s family said in a brief statement before the plea hearing that they would attend in support of the deal.

The four University of Idaho students who were found dead in off-campus housing were identified on Monday as Madison Mogen, 21, top left, Kaylee Goncalves, 21, bottom left, Ethan Chapin, 20, center, and Xana Kernodle, 20, right.

Leander James, the attorney for Mogen’s mother and stepfather, said outside the court that they “support the plea agreement, 100%.”

Mogen’s father told CBS News he also supported the deal.

“We can actually put this behind us and not have these future dates and future things that we don’t want to have to be at, that we shouldn’t have to be at, that have to do with this terrible person,” he told the network.


Here’s the latest coverage on Bryan Kohberger:


The family of Kaylee Goncalves vocally opposed the deal and asked supporters to phone and email the judge and urge him to reject it.

The judge called that an improper attempt to influence the court.

“At a bare minimum, please – require a full confession, full accountability, location of the murder weapon, confirmation the defendant acted alone, & the true facts of what happened that night,” her family wrote in a statement posted to Facebook. “We deserve to know when the beginning of the end was.”

Under the terms of the deal, Kohberger waived his right to appeal and forfeited his chance to move for a sentence reduction under Idaho law. AP

Kohberger was supposed to go to trial next month.

Prosecutors had his DNA at the crime scene – on the snap of a Ka-Bar knife sheath.

They traced his phone around town and said he had repeatedly driven by the victims’ home before and after the murders.

Surveillance video showed the suspect vehicle speeding away after the murders.

Kohberger was supposed to go to trial next month before deciding to plead guilty. Getty Images

And two eyewitnesses survived the attack – a roommate who told police she had come within three feet of a masked intruder before he inexplicably left the home, and a DoorDash driver who dropped off food for Kernodle just minutes before Kohberger killed her.

But juries can be unpredictable, and even a guilty verdict with or without a death sentence would have faced years of appeals.

Under the terms of the deal, Kohberger waived his right to appeal and forfeited his chance to move for a sentence reduction under Idaho law.


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