The Case Against Kouri Richins Podcast By Hidden Killers Podcast cover art

The Case Against Kouri Richins

The Case Against Kouri Richins

By: Hidden Killers Podcast
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Welcome to 'The Case Against Kouri Richins,' your in-depth source for understanding the harrowing and complex tale surrounding the alleged 'Moscow Mule Killer.' This podcast dives into the labyrinth of legal, personal, and psychological elements of a case that has gripped the nation. Each episode, we meticulously unravel the chilling series of events, from the alleged poisoning attempts to the assault on a family member, from the mystery of multiple life insurance policies to the surprising discovery of a changed will. Through interviews, legal documents, and expert commentary, we shed light on the tragedy that befell the Richins family, attempting to answer the crucial question – is Kouri Richins truly guilty? Tune in as we delve into the darkness of deception, betrayal, and murder. 'The Case Against Kouri Richins' – where truth is stranger than fictionReal Story Media Biographies & Memoirs Politics & Government True Crime
Episodes
  • Kouri Richins Convicted: The Appeal, The Psychology, and What Happens to the Story Now
    Mar 25 2026

    This channel has covered every turn of the Kouri Richins case — from the night Eric died to the arrest, the pretrial hearings, and the three-week trial that just ended with a unanimous guilty verdict on all five counts.

    Now we're looking at what comes after.

    If you've followed this case from the beginning, you already know the facts. What this episode digs into is the question the facts keep pointing toward: what does a guilty verdict actually mean to someone who has never — not once, not publicly, not privately according to anyone who's spoken about it — shown a crack in her story?

    A juror named Laura described watching Kouri at that defense table for three weeks. Statue. That was her word. No visible emotion. No seams. The only moment anything broke through was when the verdict was read — and even then, it was a bowed head and heavy breathing, not collapse, not confession, not anything that looked like a reckoning.

    We're covering the full legal road ahead: the appeal and the serious obstacles facing it, the pending twenty-six financial felony charges in a separate case, and the sentencing scheduled for May 13th — which would have been Eric Richins' 44th birthday. We're also looking at the psychological dimension that makes this case unlike almost any other: the children's grief book written after the murder, the six-page jail letter apparently scripting testimony for her own brother, and what behavioral science tells us about people who have made a false narrative the foundation of their identity.

    The jury wanted to find her innocent. They couldn't. Three hours.

    What happens to the story now is the question. And if this case has taught us anything — she's already working on the answer.

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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #KouriRichins #KouriRichinsCase #EricRichins #KouriRichinsVerdict #UtahMurder #FentanylPoisoning #KouriRichinsAppeal #KouriRichinsSentencing #TrueCrime #GriefBookMurder

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    15 mins
  • Eric Richins Got Justice — What Kouri's Conviction Means for His Kids and What Comes Next
    Mar 23 2026

    Eric Richins knew. He restructured his estate. He sat across from his attorney and said, explicitly, that he needed to protect his children from their mother. He put that fear into legal documents. He took every step available to him. And then he died in that house anyway.

    A Summit County jury just told the world what happened to him.

    Kouri Richins has been found guilty of his murder. Fentanyl. No physical murder weapon ever recovered. The defense called no witnesses. The jury convicted anyway — because what Eric left behind, in legal files and documented conversations, spoke for him when he no longer could.

    Five children lost their father to murder. Their mother has now been convicted of committing it. Some of them were old enough to follow this trial, to hear their family's most private details examined in a courtroom. They are on the other side of a verdict — but the hardest part of what comes next is not measured in court filings.

    Kouri Richins will be sentenced. She will almost certainly appeal. There is real material in the record: a coaching video, a star witness whose credibility took damage on the stand, and a detective who acknowledged under oath that fentanyl was never physically found at the scene. The appellate process will stretch for years. This is not over for that family.

    But justice arrived. A jury looked at everything — the grief book, the morning TV appearances, the financial trail, the letter Eric left through his attorney — and came back with the right verdict.

    Retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer joins to talk through the conviction, what the appeal realistically faces, and what the people who loved Eric should understand about where this goes from here.

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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #KouriRichins #EricRichins #JusticeForEric #FentanylMurder #GuiltyVerdict #TrueCrime #JenniferCoffindaffer #HiddenKillers #RichinsTrial #MurderConviction

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    13 mins
  • Kouri Richins Guilty: Eric Saw It Coming — So Did Bobby Curley. Neither One Survived It.
    Mar 22 2026

    Eric Richins told people after Valentine's Day 2022 that he believed his wife was trying to poison him. He had been violently ill. He said it out loud to people he trusted. Prosecutors say Kouri made him a Moscow Mule with five times the lethal dose of fentanyl approximately a month later. He was dead by morning.

    Bobby Curley grabbed a nurse's arm in a hospital on September 22, 1991. Weak, barely able to hold himself upright, he said clearly: "Please help me. My wife is trying to kill me. She is not as she seems." His heart stopped the next morning. Joann had been adding thallium to his iced tea every day for nearly a year. Hair analysis later confirmed eleven months of poisoning — nine hundred times the lethal dose administered over time, methodically, while he lost his hair and his hands burned and doctors couldn't explain what was happening. Two days before Bobby died, Joann collected a $1.7 million settlement. She needed him dead first.

    This week in Hidden Killers' Week in Review, both men are at the center of the coverage Eric's community has been following — because both cases document the same unbearable truth: knowing what is happening to you is not the same as being able to stop it.

    Tony Brueski also examines what Kouri did after Eric died. The children's book. The morning show appearances. The grieving widow performance on national television. That conduct gets examined alongside Nancy Crampton-Brophy — who published "How to Murder Your Husband" in 2011 under her real name, discussing methods and motives, then shot her husband Daniel in the chest seven years later. The essay was kept out of her trial. The jury convicted her anyway. The narcissist cannot stay invisible. The need to be seen as clever, as the author of the story, overrides every instinct toward self-preservation.

    Kouri wrote herself as the grieving mother. Eric's family watched it happen. The jury gave them the verdict that answered it. Guilty on all counts.

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    Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1

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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #KouriRichins #KouriRichinsGuilty #EricRichins #JoannCurley #BobbyCurley #NancyCramptonBrophy #JusticeForEric #PerfectWife #WifePoisoner #TrueCrime

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    30 mins
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