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True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Kouri Richins Trial Live: FBI Agent on Boyfriend Tears, Phone Searches, and the Evidence Juries Actually Remember

True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Tony Brueski

News, True Crime, News Commentary

4.2 β€’ 612 Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 9 March 2026

⏱️ 22 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary


The boyfriend took the stand and cried. The housekeeper and the dealer told opposite stories about the same drug buy. The phone showed searches about what poison does to a death certificate. And none of it, individually, proves Kouri Richins killed her husband. That is the challenge of a purely circumstantial case β€” and potentially, it is also its strength.

Retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer joins us live to break it all down from an investigative standpoint.

She analyzes Josh Grossman's courtroom appearance β€” head in hands, wiping tears, listening to text messages read aloud in public, including a message asking if he would marry Kouri if she were divorced right now, sent weeks before Eric's death. What is the FBI trained to look for when a witness appears genuinely conflicted about the person they're testifying against β€” and how does a jury process that kind of emotional complexity on the stand?

She breaks down the digital evidence: Kouri Richins' phone searches for poison, death certificates, and how to delete iPhone messages. What does search history evidence actually mean inside an FBI homicide investigation, and how do prosecutors prevent the defense from successfully reframing it as morbid curiosity?

She also addresses the insurance beneficiary attempt β€” someone tried to shift the policy from Eric to Kouri, and an advisor caught it β€” and what that kind of pre-death financial move signals to investigators about where someone is in the planning process.

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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 #FentanylMurder #UtahMurderTrial #TrueCrimeTrial #MurderTrial2026 #JenniferCoffindaffer #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #PoisoningCase

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Bruske and Robin Dree.

0:08.2

Let's talk about Corey Richens.

0:11.2

Nine days now into the Corey Richens murder trial.

0:14.6

Prosecutors have methodically layered financial pressure, digital evidence, a fractured drug chain,

0:20.1

and now a boyfriend's tearful courtroom

0:22.0

testimony and what they believe is an airtight portrait of premeditation. The defense is fired back

0:27.6

with mistrial motions, credibility attacks on immunity witnesses, and questions about sloppy, early

0:33.3

police work. Joining us is retired FBI special agent Jennifer Coffendaffer.

0:39.7

Jen, I want to talk about, there's a lot of areas of this case they want to talk about,

0:43.8

but let's start with the chain. The chain that goes from Eric consuming the fentanyl-l-laced

0:52.7

cocktail to where it came from.

0:56.1

It goes from Corey making the drink to Carmen Lauber procuring the substance,

1:03.5

then to Robert Krazer, the street-level dealer that she apparently got it from.

1:09.5

The big argument from the side of the defense is that, well, nobody knows what,

1:14.7

nobody asked for fentanyl.

1:16.7

They asked for oxy.

1:18.1

They asked, she asked for the Michael Jackson stuff.

1:20.8

One of them saying it's oxycodone.

1:22.4

One of them is saying it's oxycontin.

1:24.2

Nobody knows what the hell it is.

1:25.8

But at the end of the day, does any of that really

1:28.6

matter? Because intent is really what we're getting to at the end of this. And that was,

...

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