How Far Did Circumstantial Evidence Carry A Kouri Richins Verdict?

Jul 02, 04:00 PM
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No one testified to how the fentanyl got into Eric Richins's body. The defense hammered that point for three weeks. And the jury convicted Kouri Richins anyway — on every count. This look back brings two expert lenses to the question of how the state pulled it off.

Defense attorney Bob Motta and retired FBI Behavioral Analysis Chief Robin Dreeke break down the conviction from the inside. The case had real gaps: prosecutors never proved the precise mechanism of the poisoning, and much of what the defense argued was missing on the physical side stayed missing. Yet the state built something the jury found overwhelming — starting with the dead man's own warning. Eric Richins reportedly told multiple people he believed his wife was trying to poison him, less than three weeks before he died.

We revisit where the case stood at the time of our reporting and walk through what actually moved the jury: the insurance timeline, the forged signature, the financial motive prosecutors spent weeks constructing, and the behavioral profile of someone who allegedly tried once, failed, and tried again. Motta explains how a defense fights a circumstantial case this dense, and where this one ran out of room. Dreeke reads the behavior. Together they unpack what this verdict reveals about how far circumstantial evidence can carry a prosecution when the physical proof simply isn't there. Richins has maintained her innocence and indicated she will appeal.

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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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