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sent a car and a security detail to collect Harry, Meghan, Archie and Lilibet after their private jet landed in the United Kingdom from  on Wednesday, ahead of her Platinum Jubilee celebrations.<br>In the latest sign that hostilities between the Firm and the Sussexes are thawing, Her Majesty's Land Rover greeted the family and their children at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire before taking them to Frogmore Cottage.<br>The Sussexes left Santa Barbara airport with their children Archie and Lilibet, and their arrival marks Lilibet's first time in the country, ahead of today's Trooping the Colour — the first of the  events. For Lilibet - who turns one on Saturday -  it will be the first time she has met her great-grandmother.<br>Their arrival comes just months after Harry claimed he was 'unable to return home' because is too dangerous.<br>An insider told  that 'the Queen believed it was the right thing to do' to send her car to meet her grandson and his family.<br><br>The couple's Embraer private jet landing at Farnborough, and the Queen's black Land Rover - escorted by a Volkswagen people carrier - driving onto the tarmac.<br>The Sun reported that the family were believed to have got into the blacked-out VW car, and that they travelled without their customary entourage or senior staff working for their Archewell charity.<br><br>It also said Netflix camera crews - who have been following the couple for an £11million documentary - stayed behind.<br>Harry, Meghan and their two children were not given a police escort for the 40-minutes drive from Farnborough to Windsor, pictures in The Sun suggested.<br>On June 4, their daughter Lilibet will be marking her first birthday.<br><br>The Queen is likely to miss her favourite sporting event, the Derby horse races at Epsom, for the little one's celebrations, as she meets her for the first time.<br>While the couple are expected to attend Trooping the Colour as spectators on Thursday, Prince Andrew will not, a military source told MailOnline. <br>As colonel of the Grenadier Guards, Andrew has previously played a key role in the ceremony, riding out by the Queen's side as the regiment's representative.<br>Since being stripped of the title earlier this year the Duke of York was not expected to play an active part in the event, but the possibility of him appearing with other royals on Horse Guards Parade as a spectator had previously been left open. <br>Both Andrew and the Sussexes have already been barred from appearing on the Buckingham Palace to watch the RAF Red Arrows' flypast.<br> As Britain prepares for the Platinum Jubilee weekend:<br>Plucky Brits vow to celebrate Queen's Platinum Jubilee with street parties, four days of celebrations and miles of bunting despite councils, gloomy forecast and advice to party indoors threatening to dampen mood; Security experts said Harry and Meghan may hold up inside Frogmore Cottage over the bank holiday and only leave to attend two Platinum Jubilee events because they are being denied VIP 24/7 armed protection from British police;The Queen was caught in mid-air drama as a thunderstorm forced her private jet to abort its landing in London and circle over the capital for 15 minutes;Princess Eugenie paid a moving personal tribute to her 'grannie' the Queen on the eve of the monarch's historic Platinum Jubilee celebrations;        Prince Harry , Meghan Markle and their children have arrived in the UK, marking daughter Lilibet's first time in the country, ahead of today's Trooping the Colour<br>         The family of four landed in a London airport this afternoon, with a small team of staffers, Page Six reported<br>         The Sussexes left Santa Barbara airport with their children Archie and Lilibet, and their arrival marks Lilibet's first time in the country, ahead of today's Trooping the Colour.<br><br>Pictured: The Sussexes board a plane in 2018 (file photo) <br>         Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, Colonel of the Irish Guards leads The Colonel's Review at Horse Guards Parade on May 28, 2022 in London, England<br>         The Sussexes are expected to stay at Frogmore Cottage, where they will hold a small party for Lilibet's first birthday that may be attended by the Queen<br>         Prince Andrew is not expected to attend Trooping the Colour after being snubbed for the most important military event of the Queen's Platinum Jubilee, MailOnline can reveal<br>         As colonel of the Grenadier Guards, Andrew has previously played a key role in the ceremony, riding out by the Queen's side as the regiment's representative - pictured at Trooping the Colour in 2019<br>         Harry and Meghan, along with her mother Doria Ragland, introduce Archie to the Queen and Prince Philip in May 2019.<br><br>Similar scenes are expected in the coming days when Her Majesty meets Lilibet<br>         <br>It came as security experts predicted the Sussexes may hold up inside Frogmore Cottage over the bank holiday and only leave to attend two Platinum Jubilee events because they are being denied VIP 24/7 armed protection from British police. <br>After a secret visit to see  at Windsor Castle in late April, the sixth in the line to the throne has received 'cast iron assurances' that he, Meghan, Archie and Lilibet will be protected during the Platinum Jubilee celebrations that begin today and end on Sunday. It is only the second time Meghan has returned to the UK after they sensationally quit their royal roles in 2020.<br>Simon Morgan, a former royal protection officer, told MailOnline on Wednesday that Harry would have no way of influencing the decision made by MI5, the  and the Foreign Office, even if he put pressure on his grandmother to intervene.<br><br>As a result they may be forced to keep a 'low profile' during their stay and not organise their own events.<br>Mr Morgan, who now runs the security business Trojan Consultancy, said: 'If they are staying at Frogmore Cottage they are going to be extremely secure there and that may be why they are not doing anything away from the main Platinum Jubilee events because they will not have protection for that'.<br>   RELATED ARTICLES                      <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br>14k shares<br><br><br>The couple are expected to attend the Service of Thanksgiving with the Queen at St Paul's Cathedral on Friday morning - as well as the BBC's Party at the Palace the following evening. Simon Morgan expects they will be given armed protection at these events, and on the journey to and from Windsor due to the security operation planned for the jubilee.<br>'The jubilee is one of the highest risk events for years - and the Met have a duty of care to protect those attending, especially the royal family and foreign dignitaries', Mr Morgan said. <br>British officers will stand guard at Frogmore Cottage, where they will be protected 24/7.<br><br>But this will not extend to private events such as socialising with friends at restaurants and pubs or going to the shops off the Queen's Windsor Castle estate. <br>The Duke and  are thought to be travelling without any senior staff and just a small security team, having left their most trusted workers back home in California, according to people with knowledge of their travel plans. <br>Their bodyguards, which have included those responsible for the security of Barack Obama and Michael Jackson, will not be able to carry guns in the UK and the Metropolitan Police will have primacy on security matters as soon as they step off the plane.<br>The Met's Royalty and Specialist Protection unit is understood to have spent weeks liaising with Harry's team to guarantee taxpayer-funded officers look after them as much as is allowed,  reports. <br>Lilibet will turn one on Saturday, with a party expected at Frogmore likely to be attended by royals such as Princess Eugenie, who is close to Harry and Meghan, and the Queen could also pop in if she doesn't attend the Epsom Derby.<br><br>It will be the first time the monarch will meet the great-granddaughter named after her. <br>But Prince William and Kate will not be there because they will be representing Her Majesty in Cardiff as senior working royals are sent to Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland to mark the monarch's 70 years on the throne.<br>Harry and Meghan are expected to attend the Service of Thanksgiving with the Queen at St Paul's Cathedral on Friday morning - as well as the BBC's Party at the Palace the following evening, the report claimed.<br>But the sources added that the Sussexes will not conduct their own programme of events while in Britain to avoid overshadowing the four-day weekend of celebrations for the 70-year reign of Harry's 96-year-old grandmother.<br>This suggests that they may stay in the grounds of Windsor Castle, where they will be protected by armed police at all times.<br><br>But this will not extend to while they are out at private events such as socialising with friends at restaurants and pubs or going to the shops.<br>The UK's stance is in contrast with the couple's treatment at the Invictus Games in Holland in April, where they were afforded VVIP status. <br>A former US presidential secret service agent was assigned to lead close protection for the couple and armed protection officers who usually guard the King of the Netherlands provided security outside of the venue.<br><br>A Land Rover with two other private security guards drove with Harry and Meghan's vehicle, with an unmarked car containing two members of the Dutch Royal protection squad. <br>Security experts including Mr Morgan said at the time they 'couldn't fathom' why Harry felt safe in Holland but not in the UK.<br>Harry, 37, is taking legal action against the Home Office after being stripped of permanent police protection after quitting as a frontline royal. <br>Harry has since claimed he does not feel safe under these security arrangements when bringing his family to the UK and was 'unable to return home' over fears it is too dangerous. He had even offered to pay for British police bodyguards himself - but the Met said that their officers cannot be paid for.<br>         Harry and Meghan pictured with son Archie, three, and daughter Lilibet, who will turn one this weekend<br>         more videos                                                                          <br><br>DM.later('bundle', function()<br>DM.molFeCarousel.init('#p-55', 'channelCarousel', <br>"activeClass" : "wocc",<br>"pageCount" : "3.0",<br>"pageSize" : 1,<br>"onPos": 0,<br>"updateStyleOnHover": true<br>);<br>);<br>Sources told The Mirror that he has always been 'in favour' of returning to the UK for the Queen's celebrations, despite the Met insisting its officers are not 'guns for hire'.<br>At their US home, Harry and Meghan are protected by a 24-hour security team, including 12 former special forces personnel.<br>A source said: 'For Harry, this has always been about protecting his family.<br>'He has been in constant contact with the relevant parties and made it very clear that he wouldn't travel without receiving cast iron assurances over the safety of his family.<br>'He is satisfied the right procedures are in place and they are all very much looking forward to this week's celebrations and of course getting to spend time with Her Majesty.' <br>It comes after the couple met the monarch in a brief secret meeting with Prince Charles before they flew out to the Invictus Games in the Netherlands earlier this month.<br>At the meeting, Harry and Meghan promised they would introduce the Queen to Lilibet, who is named after her.<br>With the Queen expected to pace herself over the four-day bank holiday weekend, extended so the nation can celebrate the jubilee, there is speculation she will not travel to Epsom racecourse for the Derby on Saturday as she does not have a runner, although another of her thoroughbreds is entered in a race.<br>The day could be the perfect opportunity for the royal family to gather to celebrate the christening of Lilibet at Windsor Castle on the child's first birthday.<br>A Buckingham Palace spokesman declined to comment on the reports and said: 'Frogmore Cottage remains the UK home of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.'<br>The Mail revealed on Saturday that the Queen is set to spend time with the family on Saturday to celebrate Lilibet's birthday.<br>She has never met her great-granddaughter and not seen Archie in person since he was a baby and taken by his parents to Canada and then the US.<br>There has also been speculation that the couple may try to get Lilibet christened while they are here in the private chapel at Windsor Castle, where Archie was also christened in 2019.<br>And earlier this week, he shared a post praising the Duke on Instagram, writing: 'What a joy to see you smile and be so happy.<br><br>I love being your teammate.'   <br><br>          more videos                                                                          <br><br>DM.later('bundle', function()<br>DM.molFeCarousel.init('#p-56', 'channelCarousel', <br>"activeClass" : "wocc",<br>"pageCount" : "3.0",<br>"pageSize" : 1,<br>"onPos": 0,<br>"updateStyleOnHover": true<br>);<br>);<br>The Queen arriving  back in Windsor after a short break at Balmoral ahead of the Platinum Jubilee celebrations<br>Meanwhile, With just one day before the start of the special bank holiday weekend to mark Her Majesty's astonishing 70 years on the throne, the UK has gone 'Jubilee-mad' as people drape their gardens in Union flags and even knit life-sized figures of the beloved monarch.<br>A record 12million people are gearing up for outdoor parties held in the Queen's honour, in scenes sure to be reminiscent of the Coronation seven decades ago.<br>And crowds of royal 'superfans' have already been lining The Mall near  to get the best views for Trooping the Colour on Thursday and a special Pageant celebrating the life of the nation's longest-reigning monarch on Sunday.<br>Forecasters are expecting glorious sunshine on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, but showers in and the South East on Sunday.<br><br>However, the excitement is so palpable that plucky Britons are shrugging off fears of downpours, and are instead preparing to throw their parties in their garages if the rain pours. <br>And people are ignoring council spoilsports who are threatening OAPs with punitive fines if they dare hang patriotic bunting across their streets, after Prime Minister  urged local authorities to calm down and approve 11th hour requests for street parties. Just 16,000 applications to close roads for parties have been approved across the country, and unofficial Jubilee street bashes could be broken up by police if they block traffic.<br>Meanwhile the royal household will be making final preparations for the four-day bonanza.<br><br>The Queen,  [https://healthtopical.com/fresh-stretch-marks-removal/ healthtopical.com] who enjoyed a pre-Jubilee break in Balmoral ahead of the weekend, has arrived at Windsor and is expected to delight crowds with an appearance on the Buckingham Palace balcony - at the start of celebrations after Trooping the Colour on Thursday.<br>It is also expected that she will appear again on the balcony after the Pageant parade finale on Sunday.<br>The 96-year-old monarch is also hoping to be able attend the service of thanksgiving at St Paul's Cathedral on Friday, with her wider family including - it is expected - Prince Harry and , and the Duke of York.<br>However,  is not expected to attend Trooping the Colour after being snubbed for the most important military event of the Jubilee.  <br>              <br> <br>              Phil Smith said there were a 'dozen or so Queens dotted about' (including this one, left) including several likenesses of the singer Prince <br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox news halfRHS" data-version="2" id="mol-f538c980-e1c1-11ec-b16f-13fc8371f858" website sends car and security to pick up Harry, Meghan and children
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, [https://www.cruisewhat.com/tocaya-organica-nutritional-information/ https://www.cruisewhat.com/tocaya-organica-nutritional-information/] 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: '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

Version du 3 décembre 2022 à 15:59

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, https://www.cruisewhat.com/tocaya-organica-nutritional-information/ 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: '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