UT - Kouri Richins, 33, Author, wife, mom, charged in husband’s “unexpected” death last year, May 2023-- MEDIA, MAPS, TIMELINE **NO DISCUSSION**

Check out some behind-the-scenes with Greg Skordas, the spokesperson for the family of Eric Richins.


Check out another behind-the-scenes shot with our correspondent, Natalie Morales, with Kouri’s attorney, Skye Lazaro.



On March 4, 2022, Kouri Richins says she found her husband, Eric Richins, unresponsive in their bed.The grieving widow from Utah was arrested and charged with murder shortly after she wrote a children's book to help their kids cope with grief.

 

Death by oxycodone overdose​

In the search warrant, detective Jeff H. O’Driscoll with the Summit County Sheriff’s Office wrote that he discovered the partner of Lisa Darden, Kouri’s mother, died in 2006. Darden’s partner died from an overdose of oxycodone.

O’Driscoll also noted that Darden had been named the partner’s beneficiary just before her death.

According to the search warrant, Darden’s partner did have prescriptions for oxycodone and struggled with prescription drug abuse. Despite this, she was not “in a state of recovery from addiction at the time of her death.”





Date of article Mar 15, 2024
 
  • The mother of accused Utah killer Kouri Richins is now suspected to have been involved in planning and orchestrating the murder
  • Richins' mother Lisa Darden, 64, was linked by detectives to the 2006 'sudden' death of her romantic partner who overdosed
  • The death of Eric Richins was also caused by an overdose after his wife served him a Moscow mule laced with fentanyl

More at link ...


15 March 2024
 
4/1/24


  • Utah State Representative Brett Garner proposed a new law that would that would ban convicted murderers from receiving money through a prenup
 

5/13/24

PARK CITY, Utah (Court TV) — Prosecutors say they have evidence showing that Kouri Richins was in dire financial straits and was planning a future with an unnamed paramour — and they will be detailing it at a court hearing this week.

Kouri Richins appeared in court for a closed hearing on Monday ahead of Wednesday’s preliminary hearing, where a judge ruled that some evidence prosecutors were seeking to introduce — including evidence that the defendant had looked into a divorce — would be fair game on Wednesday.

[..]

Prosecutors amended the complaint against Kouri to include multiple financial crimes in March, which accused her of forging her husband’s signature on documents. Among those documents was a home equity line of credit that was taken on Eric’s premarital home in March 2019. Prosecutors say he had no idea the loan existed until Oct. 2020.

[..]

“IT WOULD BE BETTER IF ERIC RICHINS WAS DEAD”​

Prosecutors said in the filing that they have a mountain of evidence showing that Kouri was having an affair with a paramour, with whom she was planning a life without Eric long before his death. A witness, not identified by name, told investigators that while she was at the Richins’ home talking about her own divorce, Kouri began to talk about wanting to end her relationship with Eric.

“The Defendant told Witness 8 that she was frustrated because she didn’t feel that she had an easy path forward in divorcing Eric Richins. The Defendant said she was concerned that Eric Richins would turn her children against her and that his family would use their finances to take the children from her. The Defendant said she felt trapped and stuck in the marriage and didn’t see a way out. The Defendant said that in many ways it would be better if Eric Richins was dead.”
The judge said prosecutors will be allowed to introduce evidence that Kouri did look into getting a divorce, and had a law firm on retainer after receiving a consultation. In a phone call with her brother, Kouri allegedly said that she ended the consultation “because she didn’t ‘want … half of everything’ and ‘want[ed] to walk away …. clean and free.’ The Court, however, may reasonably infer that the opposite is true. The Defendant didn’t want half of everything. Rather, she wanted all of everything. Accordingly, she determined to cause Eric Richins’ death.”

[..]
 

5/14/24

Deputies found four white pills, a metal funnel, a cashier’s check and chemical testing equipment at the Richins’ Francis home, a recently unsealed warrant shows.

The revelations come days before Kouri is due in court for a hearing where Third District Court Judge Richard Mrazik will decide if there’s enough evidence for her to stand trial.

[..[

They returned with another warrant five months later after Eric’s family, which had control of the property, discovered a safe in the master bedroom closet.

The warrant also cites conversations between Kouri and her mother, Lisa Darden, as cause to search the house again. On Oct. 24, 2023, Darden allegedly asked why the defense team couldn't let her in the house, and “Kouri could tell me exactly where it is I’m looking for.”

Kouri is heard replying in agreement, the warrant states.

[..]

The warrant does not list the type of pills found, just that they were white. In separate court filings, prosecutors say some of the fentanyl pills Kouri allegedly purchased in February 2023 were light blue-green.

[..]

Two other newly public documents show investigators also seized two copper cups and two copper stirs the same week they searched the safe. Eric’s family had found them in a cupboard above the basement refrigerator.

Kouri told first responders the night her husband died she’d made him a Moscow Mule, a cocktail commonly served in copper.
 

5/17/24

[..]

Grossmann, in recorded interviews, acknowledged that he was more than just Kouri's handyman.

'He was an extramarital sexual partner of Kouri prior to and after the death of her husband,' the affidavit states.

The relationship, however, did not end well.

Grossmann told detectives that Kouri had kicked him out of her condo in Saratoga Springs, Utah, in November 2022 and that he had been homeless ever since.

Sources close to Kouri claim she evicted him because he was allegedly using meth.

During a hearing on Wednesday, prosecutors in Summit County began to outline their case to show 'probable cause' that Kouri committed the murder.

They said that her lover would be an important part of their case because they demonstrate a motive for murder. He has been given 'immunity', they noted.

[..]
 

5/18/24

Skye Lazaro and the attorneys at Ray Quinney & Nebeker P.C. have been leading Kouri Richins' defense in the civil and criminal cases against her, including for the alleged murder of her husband, Eric Richins.

The firm filed paperwork May 17 stating an "irreconcilable and nonwaivable situation" for the need to withdraw from her defense.

[..]

The firm stated the situation emerged after a hearing May 15 when Third District Court Judge Richard Mrazik was to determine if there was enough evidence for Richins to stand trial for murder.

However, Richins' attorneys objected to all of Summit County prosecutors’ evidence and witness statements, delaying the case until June.

Now Richins' attorneys have asked the court to immediately grant the firm's request to withdraw and appoint new counsel to safeguard her constitutional rights and continue her defense in the charges against her.
 

5/17/24

1716070290378.png

PARK CITY — Attorneys for Kouri Richins, the woman accused of fatally poisoning her husband and then writing a book about loss, asked the court to Friday to disqualify the team of prosecutors from continuing to work on the case.

Richins' attorneys allege Summit County chief prosecutor Brad Bloodworth has been improperly using communications between Richins and her attorneys — which the attorneys say should be considered private under client-attorney privilege — while preparing the case against Richins. They ask in a motion to the court for all prosecutors to be dismissed but "specifically" Bloodworth.

[..]

At Wednesday's hearing, Bloodworth said he was not prepared to argue about whether the exhibits his team had prepared were admissible. He said prosecutors had no advance warning to the defense's opposition to the evidence. District Court Judge Richard Mrazik said he would try to reschedule the hearing as quickly as possible because Richins remains incarcerated. The new preliminary hearing has been scheduled for June 18-20.

[..]

Lazaro in a court filing on Friday alleges that prosecutors had recordings of privileged calls and restricted Richins' ability to communicate with her attorney, hindering her right to effective counsel. Lazaro said her team discovered the jail had been recording phone calls with one of Richins' attorneys, J. Ramzi Hamady and brought that up with prosecutors on Dec. 11, 2023.

"Did you know this has been happening? Ramzi is clearly an attorney of record in the criminal case and the (Division of Child and Family Services) case so I am concerned," the email said.

Bloodworth said the attorney had not registered for or used an app that prevents calls from attorneys to clients from being recorded, so those calls were recorded just like other calls, Lazaro noted in the motion, saying that Bloodworth admitted to listening to "at least a portion of the calls" since May 2023.

In an email attached to Lazaro's motion on Friday, Bloodworth said the attorney "deliberately refused" to use the app.

"Ramzi knows that in refusing to use the app, the state maintains recordings of their calls. Accordingly, it seems that Ramzi consented to the state maintaining the recordings. Moreover, the state has transparently been providing these recordings in discovery for nearly six months," his email said.
 
The firm [Ray Quinney & Nebeker P.C.] filed paperwork May 17 stating an "irreconcilable and nonwaivable situation" for the need to withdraw from her defense.

 

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