33: Kouri Richins Can't Stop Lying! Latest Lie: Jail Letter Is A Manuscript!

33: Kouri Richins Can't Stop Lying! Latest Lie: Jail Letter Is A Manuscript!

The bizarre saga surrounding Utah mom and author, Kouri Richins, just took another dramatic turn. Richins, who gained infamy for writing a book about grief following the alleged murder of her husband, now insists a suspicious letter retrieved from her cell was, in fact, a snippet from a new work of fiction she's crafting.

For context, Kouri Richins, after purportedly orchestrating the death of her husband Eric Richins, penned a heart-wrenching tale titled “Are You With Me?”. It's a book that chronicles grief, written only a year after she allegedly poisoned her spouse with a lethal Moscow mule infused with fentanyl. These actions were clouded by rumors of an extramarital affair and Eric's looming suspicions, having once shared with a close friend that Kouri might be attempting to poison him. The suspicion further intensified when, following Eric's untimely death, Kouri was set to close a whopping $2 million deal for a grand 22,000-square-foot home, a deal her husband had previously declined to fund.

In a recent development, last week, authorities discovered a six-page handwritten letter, titled “Walk the Dog,” in Richins' cell. This document, directed to her mother, Lisa Darden, allegedly contained a 'playbook' on how to coach her brother into validating a false narrative about Eric Richins' drug acquisitions from Mexico prior to his fatal overdose. Prosecutors were quick to interpret this as a brazen attempt at witness tampering.

However, in a twist that can only be described as audacious, Richins' defense, in freshly filed court documents, asserts this letter is merely a fragment of a fictional story Kouri is penning about her imaginary stint in a Mexican prison. According to the court filing obtained by Fox 13 Now, Richins clarified to her mother, “When I first got in here I was telling you how I was writing a book … those papers were not a letter to you guys, they were part of my freaking book … I was writing this fictional mystery book.”

Attempting to further distinguish her "fictional" account from reality, Richins expounded upon her story, sharing how it involved a quest to Mexico in search of drugs and eventually led to her incarceration in a Mexican prison. This narrative, however far-fetched, is being presented as the explanation for the questionable letter.
What amplifies the absurdity of these claims is the sheer audacity of Richins' recounting, even suggesting she'd asked her attorney, Skye Lazaro, to smuggle in teeth-whitening strips due to the excessive coffee consumption in her fictional Mexican jailhouse.
Richins' attorney, Skye Lazaro, while defending her client, expressed their intention to further contest the State’s allegations and emphasized the impropriety of making the letter public.
However, defense attorney Steve Burton, though not linked with the case, offered an analytical perspective to KUTV, stating, “In a case like this, you want to try to protect against convicting somebody before all the evidence is out.” Yet, he acknowledged the implausibility of Richins' narrative by noting the difficulty of explaining her sudden switch from truth to fiction.

The intrigue doesn't end there. Richins recently underwent a seizure due to being administered the incorrect medication at the Summit County Jail, where she's currently incarcerated. This medical mishap subsequently led to the discovery of the controversial letter.

Given the circumstances, Richins' defense has moved to accuse the state of breaching its gag order by releasing the letter, suggesting it might influence potential jurors.

Amid these convoluted twists and turns, one thing remains clear: Kouri Richins, whether crafting tales of grief or elaborate fictional adventures in Mexican prisons, consistently finds herself enmeshed in stories of deception. The challenge for the courts and the public will be distinguishing the facts from the fiction in this puzzling narrative.
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The latest on Catching the Long Island Serial Killer, Awaiting Admission: BTK’s Unconfessed Crimes, Chad & Lori Daybell, The Murder of Ana Walshe, Alex Murdaugh, Bryan Kohberger, Lucy Letby, Kouri Richins, Justice for Harmony Montgomery, The Murder of Stephen Smith, The Murder of Madeline Kingsbury, and much more! Listen at https://www.truecrimetodaypod.com

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Episoder(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 Mai 18min

 Kouri Richins Hired a Locksmith Two Days After Eric Died

Kouri Richins Hired a Locksmith Two Days After Eric Died

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 Mai 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 Mai 16min

Kouri Richins: The Prenup Clause That Made Murder Pay

Kouri Richins: The Prenup Clause That Made Murder Pay

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 Mai 21min

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 wen...

31 Mar 12min

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

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

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 Mar 1h 18min

Eric Richins' 44th Birthday, a Sentencing Date, and the Verdict His Family Fought For

Eric Richins' 44th Birthday, a Sentencing Date, and the Verdict His Family Fought For

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 Mar 28min

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

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

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 ...

28 Mar 36min

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