Utah children’s book author Kouri Richins has dramatic ‘abnormal’ reaction to death of hubby she allegedly killed: video
Utah children’s book author Kouri Richins sobbed and rocked back and forth after her husband Eric was found unresponsive in 2022, according to video shown to jurors at her murder trial Monday.
But the histrionics were all just a craven act put on by the money-obsessed 35-year-old mom of three — who poisoned the father of her children with a fentanyl-laced Moscow mule and left him to die in the couple’s bed, prosecutors said.
In the video, Richins cried and put her head in her hands as she swayed on the family’s sectional couch, sat cross-legged in her plaid pajamas and also got up and paced around the house.

Kouri Richins is seen in body-cam footage weeping while questioned by a cop as medics futilely try to revive her husband.AP
“I just thought he was cold. It was cold so I put the blanket on him. His body was just heavy,” Richens told investigating Summit County sheriff’s Deputy Vincent Nguyen in the footage.
“We were just fine. We were fine,” she insisted of the couple’s interactions before his death. “We had a drink together at 9 to celebrate something at work tomorrow.
“He’s gonna be OK, right?” she asked Nyugen.
The deputy responded, “They are doing their best, OK, ma’am.”

Richins is accused of lacing a Moscow Mule cocktail with fentanyl and giving the fatal drink to husband Eric Richins.AP
Nguyen, asked by a prosecutor whether the wife’s reaction was similar to others at death scenes he’s been at, replied no, according to East Idaho News.com.
“Every time I spoke to Ms. Richins, her face was in her hands, and I couldn’t see her face,” the investigator said. “At one time, I even leaned down to look and see her emotions, but it was just a little abnormal.”
Richens is accused of killing her hard-working stone-mason hubby, 39, to bail herself out of debt thanks to his hefty life insurance — and also to enjoy a “fresh start” with the man she was having an affair with.
She has claimed that she left the couple’s bedroom that night to sleep with one of their sons because he was having a nightmare and didn’t return to her and her husband’s room until around 3 a.m. — only to find Eric cold and stiff in the bed.

Richins is seen here standing by while emergency workers tried to resuscitate Eric.Summit County Sheriff’s Office
The 40-minute video played in court began with medics attempting to resuscitate Eric in their bed.
Family then started to arrive at the home, including Richens’ sister-in-law, Katie Richins-Benson, who could be heard sobbing on her arrival. At one point, Kouri hugged the inconsolable in-law after she collapsed on the floor.
Richens had told Nyugen that Eric may have taken a THC gummy that night but she didn’t know of anything else he’d taken.
Her statement appeared to contradict what her own lawyer said in their opening statement Monday morning when they suggested Eric accidentally died from pain medication and that he’d asked Kouri to get him.
Kouri also informed the deputy that Eric had chest pains when he went to bed but that she thought nothing of it.

Kouri wrote a children’s grief book a year after Eric’s death supposedly to help their three sons cope with his loss.Facebook / Kouri Richins
Eric had allergies — which he was receiving allergy shots for — and Lyme disease. The whole family had gotten over COVID a few weeks before, Kouri told the deputy.
Nyugen asked if Eric ever had suicidal thoughts.
“No, never. No,” she answered.
Prosecutor Bradley Bloodworth, during his opening statements, painted Kouri as money- and image- obsessed and claimed she killed Eric to inherit his $4 million estate to help her clear her $4.5 million debt she racked up trying to project an image of success.

Prosecutors claimed Kouri killed Eric to inherit his $4 million estate — and to free herself for a new life with her lover.Kouri Richins/Facebook
She also wanted to “fresh start” with Josh Grossman, the man she was having an affair with, the prosecutor alleged.
A year after the suspected March 3, 2022 killing, Kouri wrote a children’s grief picture book “Are You With Me?” — supposedly to help her and Eric’s three young sons cope with his loss.
She went on local tv and radio stations to promote the book and was arrested just a few months later.
But her lawyer, Kathryn Nester — who is also representing Charlie Kirk’s alleged assassin Tyler Robinson — told the jury Eric’s death was accidental and that his sister and other family members sought to pin the murder on Richins because they didn’t want to accept he died from an accidental overdose.
“No family ever wants to believe that behind closed doors someone you loved is using drugs,” Nester said.
Richins has pleaded not guilty. She’s been locked up since her arrest.
News
BREAKING NEWS: After decades of speculation surrounding the Paul Flores family, forensic examinations have now uncovered evidence suggesting something decomposed beneath the property containing STRANGE DNA—and social media is abuzz with a disturbing detail
In Kristin Smart Case, Soil Suggests Human Remains Once Present in Yard A California sheriff said investigators were searching the backyard of a woman whose son was convicted of murdering Ms. Smart, who went missing in 1996. Scientists take samples…
BREAKING: Investigators now say evidence of human remains was found beneath the California property tied to Paul Flores’ family — nearly 30 years after Kristin Smart vanished. One statement from the sheriff just changed everything 😳
ARROYO GRANDE, Calif. (AP) — Scientists specializing in human decomposition and soil took samples from the ground Thursday outside a home connected to the man convicted of killing 19-year-old college student Kristin Smart in 1996. Her body was never found. The San…
WHAT THE FAMILY DIDN’T SAY AT FIRST — A relative of Lisa Gail Fields later told investigators there had been “tension building for weeks” involving William Graham Oliver… and in the written statement, one sentence is crossed out but still partially readable under the ink
The investigation into the disappearance of Lisa Gail Fields has entered a deeply psychological phase as the focus shifts from external evidence to the internal dynamics of her own family. In a chilling expansion of the Argument Theory, detectives have…
A MESSAGE THAT CHANGED CONTEXT — Detectives reviewing data linked to Keziah Luker identified a deleted message recovered from backup files… and the restored text shows a single line mentioning William Graham Oliver followed by a timestamp from the afternoon before the incident
The evolution of the investigation into the disappearance of Lisa Gail Fields has taken a sharp and sophisticated turn with the integration of digital forensics into the historical narrative. As detectives work to validate the Argument Theory, a new pillar…
THE ARGUMENT THEORY — Investigators now believe a confrontation involving William Graham Oliver and someone inside the home of Lisa Gail Fields may have happened earlier that week… and one interview note references a “heated exchange in a parked vehicle” that was never officially reported
The investigative landscape surrounding the long-unresolved case of Lisa Gail Fields has shifted dramatically as forensic genealogists and cold case detectives pivot toward what is now being termed The Argument Theory. For decades, the disappearance and presumed murder of Fields…
5 minutes ago: Forensic teams noted serious disturbances in the bedroom, with the safe and desk appearing ransacked, and CCTV footage revealed everything. Police have released the most crucial findings
Restaurateur couple and their two young children found dead in suspected murder-suicide Matthew and Thy Mitchell owned two well-known restaurants in Houston, Texas A well-known Texas restaurateur couple and their two children have been found dead at their home in an apparent murder-suicide,…
End of content
No more pages to load