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True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Kouri Richins Psychology — Living in an Alternate Reality While Facing Murder Charges

True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Tony Brueski

True Crime, News Commentary, News

4.2612 Ratings

🗓️ 5 March 2026

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Charged with murder. Wrote a grief book. Promoted it on television. Filed lawsuits from jail demanding millions from the estate of the man she's accused of killing. Punched her sister-in-law upon learning she'd been cut from the will.

Kouri Richins appears to be living in a version of reality that nobody else can see.

Psychotherapist Shavaun Scott joins True Crime Today to examine cognitive distortion at its most extreme — how someone constructs and inhabits an alternate narrative that contradicts what everyone around them is experiencing, and genuinely believes their version is the true one.

The "Walk the Dog" letter from jail is a window into that mindset. Prosecutors called it blatant witness tampering — instructions to family members on testimony, claims that Eric purchased drugs from Mexico himself. When someone facing serious charges continues trying to control the narrative, what does that reveal?

The 911 call the night Eric died was hysterical — sobbing, barely able to answer questions. The defense called it "the sounds of a wife becoming a widow." But prosecutors say Kouri's phone was active before that call, and Eric's sister testified she appeared "well put together" when she arrived.

How does someone produce what sounds like genuine devastation after allegedly orchestrating a death? Is it performance, or can someone actually feel grief for an outcome they caused?

Internet searches recovered from Kouri's phone included "luxury prisons for the rich" and "if someone is poisoned what does it go down on the death certificate as." These suggest awareness that what she was doing was wrong.

How do you reconcile knowing something is criminal with believing you're entitled to do it?

After nearly three years in jail, Kouri maintains her innocence. Shavaun Scott explains how distortion becomes reality.

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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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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Brewski and Robin Green.

0:08.2

One of the most striking aspects of the Corey Richens case is what appears to be

0:16.1

Corey living a completely different reality than everyone else around her. We've been talking about the

0:22.6

financial end of this, but it goes far beyond just the finances. She's charged with murder,

0:29.0

yet she's filing lawsuits demanding millions from Eric's estate. She's becoming the victim.

0:34.7

She's attempting to be the victim after all of this went down.

0:40.5

After her husband has been found deceased in her home, he's being zipped up in a body bag,

0:46.5

taken out of the house.

0:48.2

She's closing on a real estate deal the same day.

0:51.5

Then she writes a children's book about mourning. This is someone who didn't

0:58.4

seem to realize when to stop. When, okay, I guess mission accomplished here if she did it,

1:05.5

obviously, innocent still proving guilty. He's gone. You can move on with your life. You're not in prison yet. Nobody's

1:13.0

looking at you super close, and the investigation really wasn't an investigation. But she kept

1:18.7

raising herself to the surface to be looked at. Look at me. Here's a book. Oh, I'm going to sue you

1:24.9

because I want more money. Let's talk about that a little bit.

1:29.1

Chavon Scott, a psychotherapist and author with me and Robin Drake on this today as we break it down.

1:35.4

I mean, that's a very interesting modality right there where everything is against you.

1:40.5

You have succeeded in flying under the radar for this long yet. You just got to be

1:45.5

back on top. Yeah, that part's sort of smacks of narcissism, doesn't it? Yeah. That look at me.

1:53.3

And she also strikes me as someone who was living this very deep fantasy life on what she was going to create for herself.

2:03.4

And the children's book, again, trying to show herself in a very empathic life, you know,

2:11.4

that she's this wonderful parent and she's helping her children.

...

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