Kohberger’s Phone Linked to Mad Greek Wi-Fi: New Clues in the Idaho Murders Case
A small digital artifact could tell a big story. New revelations from Cellebrite examiners show that Bryan Kohberger’s phone had logged the Wi-Fi network for The Mad Greek restaurant — where two of the Idaho Four victims worked. Was it a one-time proximity event, or repeated visits? And what does it mean for the timeline of how he may have encountered his victims?
In this interview, retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer joins us to break down the significance of this Wi-Fi connection. She explains how investigators can extract and interpret network logs from a suspect’s phone, why repeated connections matter, and how they might be cross-referenced with victim work schedules, receipts, and other surveillance data.
We revisit early conflicting reports: a former employee claiming she served Kohberger a vegetarian pizza, versus the owner’s emphatic denial. Could paying in cash have kept his name off the books? And how does this Wi-Fi hit fit into his broader pattern of surveillance, both at the victims’ home and potentially in public spaces?
It’s a conversation about the smallest digital breadcrumbs and how they can survive even when a suspect has meticulously wiped other data. In Kohberger’s case, they may be part of a larger behavioral map leading up to the night of the murders.