What Did Todd Gabler Find Inside the Richins Home That Police Left Behind?
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After law enforcement released the Richins home, Todd Gabler walked in and spent four or five straight days searching it. GoPro cameras running. Documents scanned. Eric's brother-in-law Clint Benson present or aware the entire time. No officers. No oversight from the Sheriff's Office. Just a PI operating under rules that gave him access a detective would need a warrant to get.
He found things. Items the initial search hadn't turned up. When he came across what looked like protected attorney-client documents, he put them in a sealed envelope unread and handed them over to the appropriate attorney. That's discipline most people wouldn't expect from someone working outside the system — and it's why the defense's attempt to paint him as a rogue operator fell apart on the stand.
In Part 2 of this three-part interview, Gabler tells Tony Brueski what he discovered during that search, how it felt to be outrunning a stalled police investigation, and what the Richins family went through while waiting over a year for the system to catch up to what one man with a cane and two hard drives already knew.
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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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