In the chilling aftermath of one of the most high-profile quadruple homicides in American history, new details have emerged regarding the unwavering—and arguably tragic—loyalty of a mother. According to a recently published report by the Daily Mail, Maryann Kohberger, the mother of convicted killer Bryan Kohberger, vehemently defended her son during a harrowing FBI interview, calling him an “angel” even as he was being led away in handcuffs.

bryan kohberger getty

The report, citing official transcripts from the 2022 raid on the Kohberger family home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania, paints a portrait of a mother blinded by affection and convinced that the American justice system had made a catastrophic error.

The scene at the Kohberger residence in late December 2022 was one of tactical precision. FBI agents and state police descended on the home to arrest Bryan for the brutal stabbing deaths of University of Idaho students Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin. While the nation watched in shock as the criminology Ph.D. student was apprehended, his mother was undergoing an intense interrogation by three federal agents.

During the interview, Maryann Kohberger didn’t just deny the allegations; she sanctified her son. “He’s my angel,” she told the agents, according to the transcripts. She insisted that the “ghastly crimes” described by authorities were incompatible with the son she knew. Her conviction was so absolute that she told investigators she would “stake her life” on his innocence, claiming that as a mother, she possessed an infallible understanding of her children’s souls.

Maryann, along with her husband Michael, also raised two daughters, Melissa and Amanda. To her, the idea of Bryan as a “butcher” was a fictional construct created by mistaken authorities.

Ethan Chapin, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Kaylee Goncalves

Perhaps the most jarring revelation in the FBI transcripts involves the origin of Bryan’s weaponry. Maryann reportedly admitted to investigators that she had actively encouraged Bryan to purchase a knife. Her reasoning was rooted in maternal concern: she wanted him to have a means of defense against potential bear attacks during his frequent hiking trips in the rugged wilderness of the Pacific Northwest.

While Maryann’s intent was protective, the reality proved predatory. Bryan eventually used a Ka-Bar knife—a military-grade fixed-blade weapon—to carry out the slaughter. While it remains unclear if that specific purchase was the direct result of their conversation, the irony is inescapable. The very tool she suggested for his survival became the instrument he used to extinguish four young lives as they slept in their beds.

Maryann described a relationship of deep confidence and frequent communication. Despite the geographic distance between Pennsylvania and Bryan’s apartment in Pullman, Washington (just across the border from the Idaho crime scene), the two maintained a bond through what she called “mother and son talks.”

She told the FBI that out of the entire family, Bryan confided in her the most. To Maryann, these phone calls were the mundane check-ins of a dedicated student. To investigators, they represented the window of time during which Bryan was allegedly scouting the King Road residence and planning the logistics of the massacre.

The tragedy for the Kohberger family—and the ultimate insult to the victims’ families—is how sharply Maryann’s “angel” narrative clashed with the judicial outcome. Despite his family’s initial public support and his mother’s private pleas to the FBI, the evidence against Bryan Kohberger was overwhelming, including DNA found on a knife sheath at the scene and cellular data placing his vehicle in the vicinity.

In a move that spared him the death penalty but ensured he would never see the sun as a free man again, Bryan Kohberger eventually pleaded guilty to the murders. Under the terms of a plea deal, he was sentenced to four consecutive life terms in prison without the possibility of parole.

MaryAnn Kohberger derek shook for fox news digital 1

The release of these transcripts highlights the complex, often agonizing role of families in the wake of mass violence. Maryann Kohberger’s testimony is a stark reminder of the “maternal blind spot”—the psychological inability to reconcile the child one raised with the monster the world sees.

However, for the families of Goncalves, Mogen, Kernodle, and Chapin, Maryann’s words likely offer little comfort. While she was telling the FBI she would stake her life on his innocence, the blood of four students was already on his hands.

Bryan Kohberger’s transformation from a “confiding son” to a convicted mass murderer is now a matter of legal record. As he begins his life sentence, the “mother and son talks” have moved from the freedom of a cell phone to the plexiglass of a prison visiting room—a grim conclusion to the story of a mother’s “angel” who turned out to be a nightmare.