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 lashed out at  Rep.<br>Liz Cheney following her massive primary loss Tuesday, going so far as to tell the lifelong political scion that she 'should be ashamed of herself' for her campaign performance.<br>Cheney lost to Trump's hand-selected challenger Harriet Hageman, who was previously a candidate for the 2018 Wyoming gubernatorial election and a former friend of Cheney's who even worked on her 2014 US Senate campaign.<br>Trump celebrated the news in a late-night Truth Social post, gleefully stating his hopes that she 'will finally disappear into the depths of political oblivion.'<br>The former President also called Cheney's 30-point loss on Tuesday a 'complete rebuke of the Unselect Committee of political Hacks and Thugs,' referring to the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol riot and its members.<br>He also declared Cheney's involvement in the investigation 'spiteful and sanctimonious' and signed off the post, saying: 'Thank you Wyoming!'<br>            Donald Trump slammed Rep.<br><br>Liz Cheney's loss - as he had made the impeachment backer and January 6 committee member his No. 1 2022 target to take out. The former president said Dick Cheney's daughter 'should be ashamed of herself, the way she acted, and her spiteful, sanctimonious words and actions towards other.<br>Now she can finally disappear into the depths of political oblivion where, I am sure, sh ewill be much happier than she is right now.'<br>           Republican Rep.<br><br>Liz Cheney said Tuesday night that she called and conceded the Wyoming primary race to the Trump-backed Harriet Hageman<br>         Former President Donald Trump (center) hit out at Cheney on his new social media app Truth shortly after Wyoming GOP primary results were in<br>In a concession speech in Jackson, Cheney made comparisons to President Abraham Lincoln, who lost a string of races before winning the White House.  <br>'Abraham Lincoln was defeated in elections for the Senate and House before he won the most important election of all,' Cheney noted. <br>Cheney spoke about how she had won her primary two years ago by more than 70 points.  <br>'I could easily have done the same again - the path was clear,' she said. <br>All she had to do, she said, was peddle former President Donald Trump's election fraud lies and enable his attacks on the democratic system. <br>'That is a path I could not and would not take,' Cheney said. <br>'This is not a game,' Cheney warned.<br><br>Everyone of us must be committed to the eternal defense of this miraculous experiment called America,' she said. <br>         Following her concession speech where she compared herself to Abraham Lincoln, Trump ripped Cheney apart once more on Truth, calling her a 'fool who played right into the hands of those want to destroy our Country!'<br>After her speech, Trump made sure he was in Cheney's rear mirror, posting on Truth: 'Liz Cheney's uninspiring concession speech, in front of a "tiny" crowd in the Great State of Wyoming, focused on her belief that the 2020 Presidential Election was not, despite massive and conclusive evidence to the contrary, Rigged & Stolen.'<br>'It was, and that's not even counting the fact that many election changes, in numerous States, were not approved by State Legislatures, an absolute must.<br><br>Liz Cheney is a fool who played right into the hands of those who want to destroy our Country!,' the former president further wrote.<br>Speaking to supporters at the Cheyenne Frontier Days Event Center, Hageman characterized her win as an effort to 'dislodge entrenched politicians' from Washington, D.C.'s 'uni-party - those Democrats and Republicans who don't really care which party is in power, just as long as they are.' <br>'Wyoming has put the elites on notice,' Hageman said, adding that if you want to represent the Cowboy State, 'you damn better well live in Wyoming.<br>           Lawyer Harriet Hageman delivers a victory speech Tuesday in Cheyenne.<br><br>She said her win 'has put elites on notice' <br>           Mary Fichtner, Hageman's college best friend who has volunteered with the campaign, holds a poster during the primary election night party of the GOP winner <br> <br>          Rep.<br><br>Liz Cheney spoke to supporters outside Tuesday night at the Mead Ranch in Jackson, Wyoming <br>          Rep.<br><br>Liz Cheney's parents Lynne Cheney (left) and former Vice President Dick Cheney (right) sat in the audience as she delivered her concession speech <br>           Harriet Hageman's supporters cheer Tuesday night at her victory party in Cheyenne <br>                  Rep.<br><br>Liz Cheney told supporters she had called Harriet Hageman and conceded as the race was being called, making the point that part of American democracy is accepting 'honorably' election results<br> <br><br>It was obvious from early returns from the ultra-red state that Cheney was toast. <br>She first trailed Hageman by nine points - and then by 25. When NBC News and other outlets started calling the race for Hageman, Cheney was behind by more than 30.  <br>At the top of her concession speech, Cheney informed her supporters that she had called Hageman and  conceded the race - making the point that part of American democracy is accepting 'honorably' election results. <br>Hageman's supporters - a number of them sporting cowboy hats - gathered around barrels decorated with cowhides and lassos munching on charcuterie platters or waiting for drinks at corner bar as Tucker Carlson's  program played on large TVs. <br>At one point, Another One Bites the Dust, played loudly. The crowd cheered when favorable returns were shown on the TVs. <br>Hageman appeared at the podium before Cheney had completed speaking. <br>'Today, Wyoming has spoken,' she said.<br><br>'Today we have succeeded at what we set out to do - we have reclaimed Wyoming's lone Congressional seat for Wyoming.' <br>She thanked Trump for his early support - and used his trademark Apprentice line. <br>'If we put you in power you will be accountable ...<br>you will answer to us,' she said. 'And if you don't, we will fire you.'  <br>Earlier Tuesday in Jackson, Cheney brought along her famous father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, to a polling place. <br>He and Lynne Cheney sat front row during her concession speech.  <br>'We're facing a moment where our democracy really is under attack and under threat,' Cheney told CBS News before going into vote. <br>The threat, of course, being Trump. <br>'And those of us across the board - Republicans, Democrats and independents - who believe deeply in freedom and who care about the Constitution and the future of the country, I think have an obligation to put that above party,' she said. <br>She also said that 'no matter what the outcome is' the 'fight is cleary going to continue,' suggesting that while she may lose Tuesday night, her political career wasn't over. <br>'Proud to cast my ballot today.<br><br>The challenges we are facing require serious leaders who will abide by their oath and uphold the Constitution - no matter what,' she later tweeted. <br>          Republican Rep.<br><br>Liz Cheney (left) appeared at a polling place in Jackson, Wyoming,  [https://pinfaves.com/peter-jackson-weight-loss/ https://pinfaves.com/peter-jackson-weight-loss/] alongside her father, Vice President Dick Cheney (right), where she spoke with CBS News  <br>           Hats and other campaign swag were on display at Harriet Hageman's primary campaign headquarters at the Cheyenne Frontier Days Event Center, where cow hides and lassos were used as decor <br>Wyoming Republicans DailyMail.com spoke to Tuesday outside Cheyenne's historic Storey Gymnasium had all voted for Hageman - with a lone Democrat saying he chose to stick with his party, and not cross over to bolster Cheney's chances. <br>Wyoming voters can switch political parties the day of the election. They can also vote at any polling place, but have to show identification. <br>'Well first of all she should represent her constituents, and she's not clearly - because that's why she's getting voted out - but secondly here's the reality, she didn't grow up in Wyoming,' said 58-year-old Cheyenne resident Roger Forystek, who works in insurance. <br>Thanks to her father's political career, Cheney split her time between Casper and Washington, D.C.  <br>'And furthermore, she's kind of a spoiled brat, in my opinion. She's a spoiled brat.<br><br>She's so used to getting her way, when she doesn't, she's throwing a tantrum,' Forystek added. <br>           Voters line up outside the Storey Gymnasium, the Central High School facility that's listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Cheyenne Tuesday.<br><br>Every Republican voter DailyMail.com spoke to at this polling place was backing Harriet Hageman <br>          A hand-painted sign in Casper, Wyoming that stan  Tacy West, a 77-year-old from Cheyenne, had an even harsher take. <br>'She comes from a crime family.<br><br>It's well known that her father was a leading pedophile,' West told DailyMail.com.<br>There's no factual basis behind West's comment - Dick Cheney has never been accused of pedophilia.  <br>          Rep.<br><br>Liz Cheney shared a photo of herself voting in Jackson, Wyoming<br>'She acts crazy. You look at her eyes and she's not there,' West added. <br>A local pastor, who asked not to be named because of his line of work, told DailyMail.com that his vote for Hageman 'was moreso to spank Cheney.' <br>'She's being sent to the principal's office,' he said. <br>Cheney has become the most prominent House Republican critic of Trump - currently serving as vice-chair of the House select committee on January 6.<br>She's paid a price - losing her No.<br><br>3 leadership position in the House Republican Conference and was expelled by Wyoming's Republican Party, as the state's voters in 2020 had voted Trump over President Joe Biden by about 43 points.  <br>The daughter of the former Republican vice president has remained steadfast in her criticism, saying in  that her party's embrace of Trump's 'big lie' - his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him - is a 'cancer.' <br>'The lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen is insidious,' she said in the video. <br>She added that the false claims are a 'door Donald Trump opened to manipulate Americans to abandon their principles, to sacrifice their freedom to justify violence, to ignore the rulings of our courts and the rule of law.' <br>For 20-year-old University of Wyoming student Abby Humble, who backed Hageman, it's not the substance - but Cheney's style. <br>'I don't disagree with what she did, I think she was just trying to defend the Constitution,' Humble told DailyMail.com.<br><br>'But at the same time, I don't really think that's what the people of Wyoming wanted ... because a lot of them are, you know, Trump supporters.' <br>          Wyoming voters stand in front of a polling place a the Old Wilson Schoolhouse Community Center in Wilson, Wyoming on Tuesday <br>          Another anti-Liz Cheney sign appeared on a billboard outside Cheyenne.<br><br>Polling last week showed Cheney 29 points down in the pivotal primary race <br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS news" data-version="2" id="mol-b0534ae0-1ddd-11ed-a19f-d5251a41eef8" website hits out at Liz Cheney after she looses Wyoming GOP primary
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state police have slammed the rumors being spread about the deaths of four university students who were found brutally murdered in their off-campus house earlier this month, as the investigation into their deaths enters a second consecutive week without any suspects.<br>Aaron Snell, the communications director for the Idaho State Police, said the rampant speculation about the deaths of Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Maddie Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20 on November 13 does a 'disservice to the families and to the community because it puts out additional information that hasn't been vetted.'<br>'Ultimately, detectives on scene have the information,' he told  over the weekend, adding: 'The people that are working this case from all three agencies...<br><br>they're the best and the brightest and they have the most up-to-date resources.'<br>But residents in the college town of Moscow, Idaho remain on edge as no new information about the students' deaths have been released, and  they do not yet have a suspect and have not even retrieved a murder weapon.<br>Law enforcement officials now say they are withholding details in an effort to catch the killer.<br>They say that they are not releasing a profile of the suspect because it could lead to more fear and suspicion in the college town, as students at the University of Idaho are already looking to stay home or take online classes while the case remains unsolved.<br>'It will potentially put more fear, more suspicion on a wide variety of people versus if we use that to really refine where we're at in our investigation,' Idaho State Police communications director Aaron Snell FOX News' Lawrence Jones Saturday night.<br><br>'I think that will be more pertinent.'<br>'And so if we just provide information to the public, I just don't think that that's going to be a wise choice.'<br>           Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Maddie Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20 were found dead from stab wounds in the off-campus house the girls shared on November 13.<br><br>The case remains unsolved <br>        Idaho State Police communications director Aaron Snell told FOX News' Lawrence Jones how they are not releasing a profile of the suspect to prevent further hysteria in the college town<br>  RELATED ARTICLES              <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br>Still, Snell said, police have been able to disprove some theories that have been circulating about the students' deaths and were able to rule out some suspects.<br>'At one point, we heard the victims were bound and gagged,' he told FOX Digital.<br><br>'Well we were able to successfully say "No that's not indeed accurate," and so we're trying to put out that information.'<br>An autopsy on the students' bodies found that they had multiple stab wounds, and 'some' had defensive wounds. <br>But there was no evidence they were bound and gagged before Goncalves and Mogen were found dead on the top floor of their Moscow home in their beds while college lovers Chapin and Kernodle were found in a second floor bedroom.<br>Snell also shot down the possibility that the quadruple murder was tied to other knife stabbings in Idaho, Washington and Oregon — despite  that they were probing a possible link between the students' deaths and a similar case in Oregon, where a husband and wife were stabbed in their beds by a crazed lunatic last year.<br>'We don't believe at this time ...<br><br>these murders are actually linked to two other knife murders that have occurred both in Pullman, [Washington] as well as Oregon,' Snell said, noting that police are 'aware of these various reports' and 'looked into them.'<br>'Again, that's part of the investigation,' he said.<br>'We have excellent investigators on this case. So ... we get critiqued by people that don't have knowledge of this specific case.'<br>And Snell denied that a dog found  on October 21 is related to the student murders, as are other animal-related deaths.<br>             Goncalves and Mogen, pictured left, were found stabbed to death on top of their beds on the top floor of the house they shared in Moscow, Idaho.<br><br>College sweethearts Chapin and Kernodle, pictured right, were found in a second floor bedroom<br>          The murder house in Moscow, Idaho is pictured here.<br><br>It remains unclear how a suspect may have gotten inside, while survivors Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke were sleeping on the ground floor<br>Moscow Police have also ruled out the girls' other two roommates, Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke, 19, as suspects after another friend used one of their cellphones to call 911 that morning.<br>Police said they received a call about an 'unconscious person' jut before noon that day, when a friend thought at least one of the victims had passed out and would not wake up.  <br>They are now refusing to release that 911 call, in which the dispatcher spoke to 'multiple' people and have said they found no evidence that Kaylee had a stalker — despite her telling her friends as much in the weeks before she died.<br>In total, FOX Digital reports, the Moscow Police Department have ruled out: the victims' two surviving roommates, a male who appears in video footage showing Goncalves and Mogen ordering food from a food truck hours before their deaths, a driver who transported them home in the early morning hours of November 13 and a man Goncalves and Mogen called multiple times just before they were murdered.<br>         Steve Goncalves, the father of 21-year-old Kaylee Goncalves, told FOX News' Lawrence Jones Saturday night how he has not heard any new information about his daughter's death from law enforcement since Wednesday at 5pm<br>           Goncalves, pictured here with daughter, admitted he is 'frustrated' by the lack of information into his Kaylee's murder as the investigation enters its second consecutive week without a suspect<br> But the lack of concrete information is 'frustrating' Steve Goncalves, Kaylee's father, who revealed Saturday night that he has not heard anything from law enforcement since Wednesday at 5pm.<br>'They're kind of just telling me that they can't tell me much, which is frustrating to me because I've been very trustworthy,' Steve said of the investigators in an interview with FOX's Lawrence Jones, revealing: 'I do know things, I haven't shared things.'<br>He said he does not want to talk badly about law enforcement because they are 'hardworking individuals,' but said he is 'concerned' that Moscow police have not told him anything in days.<br>Until then, Goncalves said: 'We're holding our tongue, we're waiting patiently, but we're definitely concerned.'<br>He asked anyone with information about his daughter's whereabouts the night of November 12 and into November 13 to come forward and speak to law enforcement officials, saying they may provide the missing key to helping unravel the mystery.<br>         Goncalves and Mogen, pictured here, had spent much of the night before their deaths at the Corner Club — a Moscow dive bar popular with University of Idaho students<br>          <br>His daughter had spent much of the night before her death at the Corner Club — a Moscow dive bar popular with students — with Mogen, with whom she had been friends in high school before they went to college together.<br>At approximately 1.30am, the pair were caught on camera purchasing a portion of carbonara pasta from Grub Wandering Kitchen - a food truck that offers late night eats on weekends.<br>Parked up close to the Moscow branch of insurers State Farm and outdoor store Hyperspud Sports, Madison and Kaylee were last glimpsed walking away towards what police have called 'a private party driver' for their final ride home.<br>The route, seen in exclusive DailyMail.com video, takes less than five minutes to complete and cuts through the University of Idaho campus and passes the Sigma Chi house on the right where Xana and Ethan spent their last night before taking a left up King Road towards their home.<br>Poignantly, the drive also goes past the Moscow Police Department headquarters which can be seen on the left just as the route turns right onto the campus.<br>According to police, the pair arrived home at 1.45am - at the same time as Ethan and Xana and 45 minutes after their other roommates, Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke, 19, who both miraculously survived the attack.<br>Less than two hours later, Madison, Kaylee, Xana and Ethan were dead - butchered as they slept by a knife-wielding villain.<br>Autopsy results showed all four died from stab wounds to the chest, with police saying the murder weapon was a large military-style knife which still hasn't been found.<br>Kaylee's dog Murphy survived the attack unscathed and didn't make a sound, while the first Dylan and Bethany knew of their roommates' fate came after 11am when they woke up and went upstairs to find them dead.<br>                 Dylan Mortensen (left) and Bethany Funke (middle) lived in the modest Moscow rental house with fellow University of Idaho students Xana Kernodle (second from left) Kaylee Goncalves (second from right) and Madison Mogen (right)  but survived the attack.<br><br>They have been ruled out as suspects<br>Police have asked for video from neighborhoods backing on to the property - suggesting they believe the killer entered and exited at the back of the house before escaping up a hill.<br>But in a twist that adds to the mystery of what happened to Madison and her friends, neighbors living in the homes backing onto the home and whose property would have been part of any escape route on foot said they heard and saw nothing.<br>Cynthia Mika, 70, told DailyMail.com that police had been to her home to ask for video but said all was quiet on the night the students died.<br>She said:  [https://www.cruisewhat.com/tocaya-organica-nutritional-information/ www.cruisewhat.com] 'We didn't hear a thing.<br><br>Our neighbors have a dog who barks and he would have woken us up if he saw anything. He didn't bark.'<br>       <div class="art-ins mol-factbox news" data-version="2" id="mol-9d580970-6e8d-11ed-b03c-43f1cab12eec" website police chief SLAMS rumors swirling over death of four students

Revision as of 13:26, 3 December 2022

state police have slammed the rumors being spread about the deaths of four university students who were found brutally murdered in their off-campus house earlier this month, as the investigation into their deaths enters a second consecutive week without any suspects.
Aaron Snell, the communications director for the Idaho State Police, said the rampant speculation about the deaths of Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Maddie Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20 on November 13 does a 'disservice to the families and to the community because it puts out additional information that hasn't been vetted.'
'Ultimately, detectives on scene have the information,' he told over the weekend, adding: 'The people that are working this case from all three agencies...

they're the best and the brightest and they have the most up-to-date resources.'
But residents in the college town of Moscow, Idaho remain on edge as no new information about the students' deaths have been released, and they do not yet have a suspect and have not even retrieved a murder weapon.
Law enforcement officials now say they are withholding details in an effort to catch the killer.
They say that they are not releasing a profile of the suspect because it could lead to more fear and suspicion in the college town, as students at the University of Idaho are already looking to stay home or take online classes while the case remains unsolved.
'It will potentially put more fear, more suspicion on a wide variety of people versus if we use that to really refine where we're at in our investigation,' Idaho State Police communications director Aaron Snell FOX News' Lawrence Jones Saturday night.

'I think that will be more pertinent.'
'And so if we just provide information to the public, I just don't think that that's going to be a wise choice.'
Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Maddie Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20 were found dead from stab wounds in the off-campus house the girls shared on November 13.

The case remains unsolved 
Idaho State Police communications director Aaron Snell told FOX News' Lawrence Jones how they are not releasing a profile of the suspect to prevent further hysteria in the college town
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Still, Snell said, police have been able to disprove some theories that have been circulating about the students' deaths and were able to rule out some suspects.
'At one point, we heard the victims were bound and gagged,' he told FOX Digital.

'Well we were able to successfully say "No that's not indeed accurate," and so we're trying to put out that information.'
An autopsy on the students' bodies found that they had multiple stab wounds, and 'some' had defensive wounds. 
But there was no evidence they were bound and gagged before Goncalves and Mogen were found dead on the top floor of their Moscow home in their beds while college lovers Chapin and Kernodle were found in a second floor bedroom.
Snell also shot down the possibility that the quadruple murder was tied to other knife stabbings in Idaho, Washington and Oregon — despite that they were probing a possible link between the students' deaths and a similar case in Oregon, where a husband and wife were stabbed in their beds by a crazed lunatic last year.
'We don't believe at this time ...

these murders are actually linked to two other knife murders that have occurred both in Pullman, [Washington] as well as Oregon,' Snell said, noting that police are 'aware of these various reports' and 'looked into them.'
'Again, that's part of the investigation,' he said.
'We have excellent investigators on this case. So ... we get critiqued by people that don't have knowledge of this specific case.'
And Snell denied that a dog found on October 21 is related to the student murders, as are other animal-related deaths.
Goncalves and Mogen, pictured left, were found stabbed to death on top of their beds on the top floor of the house they shared in Moscow, Idaho.

College sweethearts Chapin and Kernodle, pictured right, were found in a second floor bedroom
The murder house in Moscow, Idaho is pictured here.

It remains unclear how a suspect may have gotten inside, while survivors Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke were sleeping on the ground floor
Moscow Police have also ruled out the girls' other two roommates, Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke, 19, as suspects after another friend used one of their cellphones to call 911 that morning.
Police said they received a call about an 'unconscious person' jut before noon that day, when a friend thought at least one of the victims had passed out and would not wake up.  
They are now refusing to release that 911 call, in which the dispatcher spoke to 'multiple' people and have said they found no evidence that Kaylee had a stalker — despite her telling her friends as much in the weeks before she died.
In total, FOX Digital reports, the Moscow Police Department have ruled out: the victims' two surviving roommates, a male who appears in video footage showing Goncalves and Mogen ordering food from a food truck hours before their deaths, a driver who transported them home in the early morning hours of November 13 and a man Goncalves and Mogen called multiple times just before they were murdered.
Steve Goncalves, the father of 21-year-old Kaylee Goncalves, told FOX News' Lawrence Jones Saturday night how he has not heard any new information about his daughter's death from law enforcement since Wednesday at 5pm
Goncalves, pictured here with daughter, admitted he is 'frustrated' by the lack of information into his Kaylee's murder as the investigation enters its second consecutive week without a suspect
But the lack of concrete information is 'frustrating' Steve Goncalves, Kaylee's father, who revealed Saturday night that he has not heard anything from law enforcement since Wednesday at 5pm.
'They're kind of just telling me that they can't tell me much, which is frustrating to me because I've been very trustworthy,' Steve said of the investigators in an interview with FOX's Lawrence Jones, revealing: 'I do know things, I haven't shared things.'
He said he does not want to talk badly about law enforcement because they are 'hardworking individuals,' but said he is 'concerned' that Moscow police have not told him anything in days.
Until then, Goncalves said: 'We're holding our tongue, we're waiting patiently, but we're definitely concerned.'
He asked anyone with information about his daughter's whereabouts the night of November 12 and into November 13 to come forward and speak to law enforcement officials, saying they may provide the missing key to helping unravel the mystery.
Goncalves and Mogen, pictured here, had spent much of the night before their deaths at the Corner Club — a Moscow dive bar popular with University of Idaho students

His daughter had spent much of the night before her death at the Corner Club — a Moscow dive bar popular with students — with Mogen, with whom she had been friends in high school before they went to college together.
At approximately 1.30am, the pair were caught on camera purchasing a portion of carbonara pasta from Grub Wandering Kitchen - a food truck that offers late night eats on weekends.
Parked up close to the Moscow branch of insurers State Farm and outdoor store Hyperspud Sports, Madison and Kaylee were last glimpsed walking away towards what police have called 'a private party driver' for their final ride home.
The route, seen in exclusive DailyMail.com video, takes less than five minutes to complete and cuts through the University of Idaho campus and passes the Sigma Chi house on the right where Xana and Ethan spent their last night before taking a left up King Road towards their home.
Poignantly, the drive also goes past the Moscow Police Department headquarters which can be seen on the left just as the route turns right onto the campus.
According to police, the pair arrived home at 1.45am - at the same time as Ethan and Xana and 45 minutes after their other roommates, Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke, 19, who both miraculously survived the attack.
Less than two hours later, Madison, Kaylee, Xana and Ethan were dead - butchered as they slept by a knife-wielding villain.
Autopsy results showed all four died from stab wounds to the chest, with police saying the murder weapon was a large military-style knife which still hasn't been found.
Kaylee's dog Murphy survived the attack unscathed and didn't make a sound, while the first Dylan and Bethany knew of their roommates' fate came after 11am when they woke up and went upstairs to find them dead.
Dylan Mortensen (left) and Bethany Funke (middle) lived in the modest Moscow rental house with fellow University of Idaho students Xana Kernodle (second from left) Kaylee Goncalves (second from right) and Madison Mogen (right)  but survived the attack.

They have been ruled out as suspects
Police have asked for video from neighborhoods backing on to the property - suggesting they believe the killer entered and exited at the back of the house before escaping up a hill.
But in a twist that adds to the mystery of what happened to Madison and her friends, neighbors living in the homes backing onto the home and whose property would have been part of any escape route on foot said they heard and saw nothing.
Cynthia Mika, 70, told DailyMail.com that police had been to her home to ask for video but said all was quiet on the night the students died.
She said: www.cruisewhat.com 'We didn't hear a thing.

Our neighbors have a dog who barks and he would have woken us up if he saw anything. He didn't bark.'
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox news" data-version="2" id="mol-9d580970-6e8d-11ed-b03c-43f1cab12eec" website police chief SLAMS rumors swirling over death of four students