The Richins Deception Record: Every Detail the Jury Has Already Seen
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The Kouri Richins jury doesn't need to wait for closing arguments to form an opinion about who Kouri Richins is. The evidence has already told them. Phone searches for "fentanyl poisoning." Instructions on deleting messages. Memes accessed on her phone minutes after first responders left — one saying "I'm really rich." A jailhouse coaching letter. A forged signature on a life insurance policy. A drug purchase three days after her husband's death, disguised as a cleaning invoice.
This episode is a complete breakdown of the deception pattern the prosecution has assembled — what each piece means legally, how they function together in front of a jury, and what the defense has to do to prevent the sum of this record from becoming a verdict.
Eric Faddis — who has prosecuted cases built exactly like this and defended clients who faced records like this — walks through every element with Tony Brueski. No softening, no speculation. Just a clear look at what's actually in front of this jury.
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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.
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