Idaho college murders: House demolished despite some families' objections
Two families didn't want the house torn down before the trial.
The off-campus house where four University of Idaho students were killed was demolished on Thursday -- despite mixed feelings from victims' families.
The demolition began before the sun came up. The three-story house in Moscow, Idaho, was torn down in under two hours.
The excavator started by removing the siding and then the first level of the house. The giant claw then busted through the second level, following by the third level and the roof.
Moscow Police Chief James Fry and officials from the university were among those at the scene.
About eight dump trucks removed the debris and the cleanup process is now underway.
The gruesome crime unfolded in the early hours of Nov. 13, 2022, when roommates Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen and Xana Kernodle, and Kernodle's boyfriend Ethan Chapin, were stabbed to death inside the girls' home. Two other roommates survived.
The suspect, Bryan Kohberger, who was a criminology Ph.D. student at nearby Washington State University at the time of the murders, was arrested weeks later. He has pleaded not guilty and is awaiting a trial date.
University officials said they decided to tear down the house during winter break to try "to decrease further impact on the students who live in that area."
Kaylee Goncalves' family was firmly against knocking down the house, saying doing so would "destroy one of the most critical pieces of evidence in the case" before a trial date is even set.
"It is obvious from the two recent visits to the house, by both the Prosecution and the Defense, that there is still evidentiary value in having the King Road house still standing. There may be additional discovery by either party that prompts one side or the other to go back to the scene of the crime," the Goncalves family said in a statement this month. "Jurors are notoriously unpredictable and they tend to make decisions on a variety of facts and circumstances. It would be foolish of us to try and foresee what they will want or need to make a just verdict in this case."
"It’s like screaming into a void," the family said. "Nobody is listening."
The Goncalves and Kernodle families issued a strong new statement on the eve of the demolition pushing for a trial date to be set and urging the university to not tear down the house until the trial is completed.
They cited eight reasons they say the house could hold evidentiary value for the trial, including: all of the entry and exit points in the home; where any potential biological evidence was found inside or outside the house; and if the house itself could have been a target for the crime.
But Ethan Chapin's parents were supportive of the demolition. Ethan was a triplet and his brother and sister are both current University of Idaho students.
The Chapins said the demolition is "for the good of the University, its students (including our own kids), and the community of Moscow."
University President Scott Green said, "While we appreciate the emotional connection some family members of the victims may have to this house, it is time for its removal and to allow the collective healing of our community to continue."
The university added, "After the trial was delayed earlier this fall, both prosecution and defense asked for access to the house and have both gone into the house in the last two months. Neither has asked for the house to be retained."
University spokesperson Jodi Walker told ABC News at the scene on Thursday that "it was powerful to see the house come down, and to know that this was, sort of, that close of a chapter and the start of the next one."
She stressed that university officials had discussed the demolition with the prosecution and defense, and both sides were "done with the house" and "have what they need to bring this case to justice."
ABC News' Julie Scott contributed to this report.