Idaho murders: Bryan Kohberger’s former fish cleaning boss says suspect couldn't learn filleting

The Pennsylvania business owner who briefly employed Idaho murders suspect Bryan Kohberger more than a decade ago says the teen who would go on to be accused in a quadruple stabbing while studying for a Ph.D. didn't last long.

Charles Conklin, who founded the Big Brown Fish And Pay Lakes in Effort, Pennsylvania, 35 years ago, said Kohberger's short stint ended well before he had any significant training with a filleting knife.

"For us to be painted in some kind of light along with this terrible tragedy is very disturbing," he told Fox News Digital Thursday. "The truth of the matter is: He's here a very short time, 12 years ago, young kid. Did our best to mentor him and mutually decided the job wasn't for him."

Conklin said he started his fish hatchery 50 years ago – when he was just 10 years old. The Fish and Pay opened 35 years ago. 

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He distanced himself from Kohberger and the allegations against him and noted that hundreds of young people have taken their first jobs at his business and gone on to greater things.

"We've had hundreds of kids come through here and mentored them, and they've gone on to do wonderful things," he said. "Pharmacists and teachers and have their own electrical companies and almost everything you can imagine."

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"We're so proud of all those kids. "

In Kohberger's short stint, he had just a few hours training with a filleting knife – a thinner and more flexible tool than the large, fixed-blade knife police say was used in the murders – and lasted less than three weeks on the job altogether, Conklin said.

"He never got proficient at it," he added. "Which isn't abnormal for a young kid, probably his first job. He was 15 or 16 years old."

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"When kids come in here, their jobs are to keep the place clean, pick up paper all day long, help customers catch fish, fix poles, and then we try to train them how to fillet fish," he said. "And if they get good at it, then they can fillet customers' fish."

Kohberger wasn't around long enough to get to that point.

"After that 20th day he worked here, his direct supervisor sat and talked with him, and mutually they decided this job wasn't for him," he said. "That's all there was to it. He really didn't learn how to use any utensils here."

Kohberger, a Pennsylvania native, had trouble with drugs in his late teens but got himself together and obtained a master's degree in criminal justice from DeSales University.

This past fall semester was his first at Washington State University, where he was seeking a Ph.D. in criminology.

The school is just 7 miles away from the University of Idaho, which all four stabbing victims attended: Madison Mogen, 21, Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20 and Ethan Chapin, 20. Three of the victims were housemates and Chapin, Kernodle's boyfriend, lived across the street and was staying the night. 

Police say they were killed around 4 a.m. on Nov. 13 with a large knife. 

Investigators zeroed in on Kohberger's car as the suspect vehicle and say his phone data shows he allegedly stalked the crime scene a dozen times before the slayings and returned again hours later.

According to court documents, detectives found DNA on a Ka-Bar knife sheath left at the scene, next to Mogen's body.

That sample matched familial DNA taken from the trash can outside his parents' house in the Pocono Mountains, and court records unsealed this week show the FBI took additional DNA swabs from Kohberger directly after his arrest on Dec. 30.

LSU’s Olivia Dunne promotes use of AI technology for essay writing, prompting university to issue warning

Louisiana State University has issued a statement warning its students over the use of artificial intelligence after star gymnast Olivia Dunne posted a video on social media promoting the technology as it relates to essay writing. 

Dunne, 20, posted a TikTok video on Sunday about the A.I. powered website Caktus AI, which has since gone viral among her more than 7.2 million followers on the popular social media platform. 

"Need to get my creativity flowing for my essay due at midnight," a text in the video read. 

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The video, which has had nearly a million views, prompted the university to issue a warning to its students, cautioning them about plagiarism. 

"At LSU, our professors and students are empowered to use technology for learning and pursuing the highest standards of academic integrity," the statement said, via The Advocate. 

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"However, using AI to produce work that a student then represents as one’s own could result in a charge of academic misconduct, as outlined in the Code of Student Conduct."

LSU’s code of conduct for students does not specifically outline the use of artificial intelligence but does qualify plagiarism as academic misconduct. 

Plagiarism is defined in the code of conduct as a "lack of appropriate citation, or the unacknowledged inclusion of someone else's words, structure, ideas, or data; failure to identify a source, or the submission of essentially the same work for two assignments without permission of the Instructor."

The statement did not specifically name Dunne in its statement. 

Dunne is in her junior year at LSU. In 2021, she made the SEC’s First-Year Academic Honor Roll and was a WCGA Academic All-American. She was a WCGA All-American in the uneven bars and, in 2022, was named to the SEC Academic Honor Roll.

Fox News’ Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report.


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