“He Wasn’t There”: Kohberger’s Chilling Jail Behavior & What It Really Says About His Mind
After the headlines faded and the trial was over, Bryan Kohberger sat in jail—and what surfaced next was every bit as disturbing as the crimes themselves. In Part 3 of this powerful series, psychotherapist Shavaun Scott joins Tony Brueski to dissect what Kohberger’s reported behavior in jail actually reveals about his mental state.
Inmates described him as cold, fastidious, withdrawn. Talking to himself. Obsessive about order. According to sources, he wasn’t violent—but he was “not present.” So what does that mean? And is it a glimpse into his psyche, or a calculated act of control?
Together, we explore the psychological implications of his silence during sentencing. His refusal to apologize. His rigid demeanor and reported lack of reaction to the details of his own crimes. Shavaun walks us through what this type of behavior says about remorse, detachment, and identity in mass killers.
Was he disassociating? Was he emotionally flat because of pathology—or performance? How does someone so socially disconnected fly under the radar long enough to commit a crime of this scale? And how does jail change someone like that—if at all?
This episode pulls back the curtain on a man who avoided emotional expression but may have been revealing far more than he realized.