Three Innocent Children that the Kouri Richins’ Verdict Can't Fix

Three Innocent Children that the Kouri Richins’ Verdict Can't Fix

The verdict is in. Kouri Richins is guilty of charges that she poisoned her husband with fentanyl. But this part that still lands like a gut punch — She wrote a children's book about his death and went on television to promote it. The jury took three hours. Three hours to convict her on all counts. Apparently, they didn't need much time.

But verdicts don't raise kids.

Her three sons were 9, 7, and 5 when Eric Richins died. They're preteens now, living with his family, trying to grow up under the weight of something most adults couldn't carry — a father gone, a mother in prison, and somewhere out there, a book she wrote using their grief as the raw material.

This episode isn't about Kouri. It's about what research and case history actually tell us about children who land in exactly this position. We look at betrayal trauma — the specific psychological damage that happens when the person who was supposed to protect you was also the threat — and we pull the thread on two cases that rhyme with this one: Susan Wright's kids, quietly absorbed into their father's family after her 2003 conviction, and Betty Broderick's sons, who grew up split down the middle on whether their mother deserved to die in prison.

Kouri's case has one element none of the comparisons do. The book. She wrote it. She sold it. She used her sons' loss as the vehicle — and according to testimony, it's part of what put her away.

Those boys will be searching their own story for the rest of their lives. There's no chapter for what comes next.

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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 #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #GriefBookMurder #FentanylPoisoning #BetrayalTrauma #UtahMurder #TrueCrimePodcast #ChildrenOfConvictedKillers

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Jaksot(296)

Kouri Richins Couldn’t Spell Fentanyl But Used It to Kill

Kouri Richins Couldn’t Spell Fentanyl But Used It to Kill

She searched “if someone is poisned what does it go down on the death certificate as.” Not overdosed. Poisoned. Her own word. In part four of our five-part definitive series, we lay out the digital ev...

8 Touko 18min

 Kouri Richins Hired a Locksmith Two Days After Eric Died

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Unlock at 3:06 a.m. Speaker at 3:08. The 911 call two minutes later. That’s the timeline. No frantic calls to family. No calls to friends. Just a precise, measured sequence that suggests a woman who k...

7 Touko 16min

Kouri Richins Bought Fentanyl at a Gas Station. Twice.

Kouri Richins Bought Fentanyl at a Gas Station. Twice.

She bought the pills. She asked for stronger ones. She asked for the strongest thing available. And then she put them in her husband’s drink. In part two of our definitive five-part Kouri Richins seri...

6 Touko 16min

Kouri Richins: The Prenup Clause That Made Murder Pay

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A prenuptial agreement. One clause. If Eric Richins died while they were married, Kouri would inherit everything. Divorce meant walking away with nothing. Death meant millions. That single clause in a...

5 Touko 21min

Kouri Richins: What Eric Knew — and What It Cost Him

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Eric Richins knew something was wrong. He documented it. He restructured his estate, told his attorney he was protecting his children from his wife, and took legal steps to put his fear on the record....

29 Maalis 1h 18min

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Eric Richins restructured his estate roughly eighteen months before he died. He told his attorney exactly why: to protect his children from his wife. He knew something was wrong. He documented it. He ...

28 Maalis 28min

Eric Richins' Family, the Children's Book, and the Questions That Survive the Verdict

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The jury came back guilty. For the family of Eric Richins, that word carries everything they fought for over four years of investigation, hearings, and trial. And yet the questions that settle into a ...

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