Bryan Kohberger Case: Police Issues Warrant to Tinder, Doordash Amid Idaho Murders Probe
Dozens of companies, banks, and law enforcement organizations received warrants in the investigation of Bryan Kohberger case, who is the alleged suspect in the Idaho murders. Ted S. Warren - Pool/Getty Images

Dozens of companies, banks, and law enforcement organizations received warrants in the investigation of Bryan Kohberger case, who is the alleged suspect in the Idaho murders.

The warrants were handed out to more than 60 companies, which included AT&T, American Express, Bank of America, Apple, PayPal, Reddit, Tinder, and Doordash, according to the New York Post.

It was reported that the warrants have "highly intimate facts or statements," which would be highly objectionable to a reasonable person.

The court also said that the documents have facts or statements "that might threaten the safety of or endanger the life or safety of individuals.

The Moscow Police Department Forensic Lab and Ka-Bar Knives also received warrants due to its previous search for a "Rambo"-style knife, which was used in the slayings.

Warrants in The Bryan Kohberger Case

Internet sleuths claimed that they found a Reddit account that made accurate projections about the case reportedly before the information was released publicly.

When Kohberger was extradited to Idaho, a gag order was enforced, which prevents attorneys, law enforcement agencies, and others related to the case from talking or writing about it.

The family of Kaylee Gonclaves, one of the victims in the murder, filed an appeal against the gag order earlier last month.

The victim's family called it "facially overboard and vague," adding that it was unconstitutional and violated their right to free speech, as reported by Daily Mail.

Gonclave's family attorney, Shanon Gray, said that being the family's lawyer, allows him to relay to the media any of the opinions, views, or statements of the Gonclave family about any part of the case.

Meanwhile, Kohberger's lawyer, public defender Anne Taylor, filed an objection to the appeal, arguing that it does not violate First Amendment rights and is not "facially vague."

An attorney for Taylor's office, Jay Weston Logsdon, said that Gray's clients have already been voicing their thoughts and opinions themselves.

Idaho Murders Case

Investigators have also seized, searched, and dismantled a 2015 white Hyundai Elantra that Kohberger would drive on certain occasions. Officials said that the car matched the vehicles seen in surveillance footage close to the home, where the killings took place. They used the footage to connect Kohberger to the Idaho murders.

TIME noted that authorities also got DNA swabs from Kohberger on the day of the search. Law enforcement found a leather knife sheath at the crime scene that had Kohberger's DNA on it, according to an earlier released affidavit.

The victims were identified as Ethan Chapin, 20; Kaylee Gonclaves, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Madison Mogen, 21.

In March, it was announced that the home where the students were killed will be demolished. The owner of the residence offered it to the University of Idaho and the school accepted.

The University of Idaho President Scott Green said in a memo that it is a "healing step" and removes the "physical structure" where the murders occurred.

This article is owned by Latin Post.

Written by: Mary Webber

WATCH: Bryan Kohberger has 'strong case' for death penalty: former FBI agent | NewsNation Prime - from NewsNation Now