How Did The Kouri Richins Case Go From Stalled To Conviction?
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 • 612 Ratings
🗓️ 31 May 2026
⏱️ 43 minutes
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Summary
The criminal investigation into Eric Richins' death had effectively stalled by fall 2022. Deputy Jayme Woody acknowledged the investigative lapse under oath at trial. The break came not from law enforcement but from a private investigator retained by the victim's family on a civil matter.
Todd Gabler, a 34-year veteran investigator who had worked exclusively for the defense throughout his career, identified the individual prosecutors would later allege sourced the fentanyl, documented her criminal history and drug court failures, and began providing evidentiary material to the Summit County Sheriff's Office that the agency had not independently obtained. Gabler conducted a multi-day search of the Richins residence after law enforcement released the scene, utilizing body cameras to document findings the initial search had not captured. He conducted approximately 50 interviews and tracked multiple vehicles connected to the case.
The financial motive presented at trial was comprehensive. Kouri Richins carried approximately $7.5 million in debt. Her forensic accountant characterized the financial situation as an implosion — 236 insufficient-funds transactions, fifteen failed renovation projects, and a residential construction business in freefall. Eric Richins had been consulting divorce attorneys and estate planners, had removed the defendant from his will and life insurance designations, and had established a trust for their three minor children without her knowledge.
The defendant's prenuptial agreement created a financial landscape in which the victim's death was the only scenario producing net financial benefit. She secretly purchased $1.9 million in life insurance policies on Eric's life without his knowledge. Trial evidence included communications referencing "the Michael Jackson stuff" directed to her housekeeper and text messages documenting a concurrent relationship with Robert Josh Grossmann. The prosecution presented an alleged escalation pattern — a poisoning attempt in Greece, a fentanyl-laced sandwich on Valentine's Day from which Eric survived by using his son's EpiPen, and a final lethal dose administered in a cocktail approximately two weeks later at five times the fatal threshold. The jury returned guilty verdicts on all counts following deliberations of less than three hours.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is the big breakdown. A long look back at some of the biggest stories we're covering for you at the Hidden Killers podcast and True Crime Today. |
| 0:09.1 | This is Hidden Killers with Tony Bruske. Here now, Tony Bruske. |
| 0:15.2 | Todd Gabbler showed up to testify six weeks after neck fusion surgery. You walked in with the cane, you had the big neck |
| 0:22.1 | brace on, told the judge that you even skipped your pain medication so your mind would be clear. |
| 0:28.9 | We all saw that and were like, bravo. This man is here with a mission and he has a purpose to be here. |
| 0:36.5 | Joining the conversation to discuss all this Robin |
| 0:39.3 | Dr. Reck, retired FBI, Special Agency for the Counterintelligence Behavioral Analysis Program. |
| 0:44.0 | And of course, our guest, Todd Gabbler, is with us. Todd, just in your own words, |
| 0:49.3 | obviously you made it happen to be there. As concise as you can be about it why was it so important |
| 0:56.9 | for you to be there that day and have your voice heard and have your findings be heard in front |
| 1:02.8 | of that jury well you know a spinal cord injury the spinal cord injury that I had was severe. It needed to be corrected |
| 1:14.0 | and for me being able to walk and feel things in my hands and feet. The recovery from that |
| 1:23.2 | surgery is 52 weeks. So a year. And traveling in an airplane was excruciating. |
| 1:33.6 | Yeah. But this is not the kind of case that I was willing to phone in or Zoom from. |
| 1:43.7 | This, the seriousness of this case, the over 900 hours of investigation that I had in this |
| 1:52.0 | case, I did not believe that that was appropriate for me to simply Zoom call it in. |
| 2:09.4 | There, you know, we have, we live in a world today that is, that is this, what we're doing right now, right here. |
| 2:10.6 | Yeah. |
| 2:11.6 | But that is not appropriate for trial. |
| 2:16.6 | There are things that happen in real time inside that courtroom |
| 2:22.3 | that I would not be able to respond to or understand. And so for some things, this type of interaction is appropriate for a trial about where a life hangs in the balance. |
| 2:41.2 | It's just not appropriate to appear telephonically. |
... |
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