'She was just stumbling': Eyewitness claims Kaylee Goncalves got 'super drunk' at club before murders
This article is based on sources and MEAWW cannot verify this information independently.
MOSCOW, IDAHO: An eyewitness who met Kaylee Goncalves, one of the slain Univerity of Idaho students, claimed that she got super drunk at the club and she was "stumbling." Before they were murdered, Goncalves and Madison Mogen spent the night at the Corner Club. Local resident Joe Vidot, who was also present at the club, reportedly said, "A lot of guys were talking to them at the Corner Club. The taller girl with the pink on, she was glass-eyed. I audibly said 'Eww' out loud. She was just stumbling through."
According to Daily Mail, Vidot then exited the bar with a companion and headed outside to the Grub Bus, a well-known food truck. According to Vidot, later, Goncalves, Mogen and a man in a hoodie, whom police do not believe was involved in the killings, arrived at the same food truck. "I saw the guy show up with the two of them. The vibe I got from him is that he's super nice. He was trying to help them get home safe. He was funny, and he was nice. He was there to make sure that they got home safe because they were super drunk. I thought he was a solid guy. Believe me when I tell you that his vibe was not bad," Vidot said.
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In a shared student house in Moscow, Idaho, Mogen, 21, Goncalves, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and Ethan Chapin, 20, were murdered on November 13, by an unidentified killer. The three female students all resided there while Chapin was seeing his girlfriend Kernodle.
Goncalves and Mogen were killed in their beds on the top level of the building while Kernodle and Chapin were killed on the floor below. There were two other roommates present at that time, who escaped unharmed on the first level. Police are yet to name a suspect or make any arrests while appealing for anyone with information to come forward.
Earlier, as per TMZ, the police said that they now believed that the videos could lead them to a suspect. Idaho State Police's Aaron Snell told TMZ that his team was reviewing the footage and added, "What we need people to recognize is that oftentimes what's not in the video might help us just as much as what is. We can really create that whole picture based on what is there, what isn't there, and be able to follow that through."