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True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Kouri Richins Trial: Phone Forensics Show Deleted Memes, Searches for Luxury Prison

True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Tony Brueski

News, True Crime, News Commentary

4.2612 Ratings

🗓️ 7 March 2026

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The digital evidence presented in the Kouri Richins trial doesn't need a plea deal or immunity agreement. It speaks on its own.

Forensic analyst Chris Kotrodimos testified about data extracted from seven phones in this case. What he showed the jury was damning. Deleted meme thumbnails recovered from Kouri's phone—accessed moments after first responders left the home where Eric Richins lay dead—included one captioned "I'm really rich" and another showing a woman crying into cash.

Between January and mid-March 2022, hundreds of messages, web searches, and call logs were scrubbed from Kouri's white iPhone. Eric's phone showed no mass deletions during the same period.

The timeline around Eric's death raised immediate questions. Kouri's phone was unlocked multiple times at 3:06 a.m. the night he died. She didn't call 911 until 3:21. What happened in those fifteen minutes?

Google searches recovered from Kouri's replacement phone included how to wipe an iPhone remotely, whether police can force lie detector tests, luxury prison information, and life insurance payout timelines. Cell tower data showed phones belonging to the alleged drug supplier and middleman meeting at the same Draper gas station on the three exact dates prosecutors say fentanyl was purchased—and nowhere else.

Valentine's Day data presented a split screen: Kouri texting her alleged boyfriend "I love you" while Eric texted her saying he was sick. That's the day prosecutors allege she attempted to poison him with fentanyl. Former Chief Medical Examiner Erik Christensen testified Eric was given fentanyl by someone else.

The psychological question underlying this case—how did Eric miss the signs?—has answers in documented research on coercive control and love bombing. Smart people don't see it coming because they're targeted precisely for their trust.

Kouri Richins is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

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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.

#KouriRichinsUpdate #RichinsTrialEvidence #PhoneForensics #EricRichins #FentanylMurder #DeletedTexts #LoveBombing #CoerciveControl #SummitCountyTrial #TrueCrimeToday

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is the big breakdown.

0:02.2

A long look back at some of the biggest stories we're covering for you at the Hidden

0:05.9

Killers podcast and True Crime Today.

0:09.2

This is Hidden Killers with Tony Bruske.

0:12.2

Here now, Tony Bruske.

0:16.1

Why do smart, successful, capable people end up married to someone who allegedly wants them dead?

0:24.0

Eric Richens wasn't naive.

0:26.8

By all accounts, he was a hardworking man who built a masonry business, loved the outdoors,

0:33.4

hunted, and devoted himself to his three sons.

0:36.5

His family describes him as present, capable, reliable, the kind of guy who showed up.

0:44.1

According to prosecutors, his wife was texting her boyfriend about their future together while Eric was still coming home every night thinking he had a marriage.

0:53.6

Prosecutors alleged she was $4.5 million in debt buying fentanyl from her housekeeper

1:00.0

and planning a life that didn't include Eric except for his life insurance and his estate.

1:05.5

How lovely.

1:07.1

If the prosecution is right, Eric Richard spent years living with someone who was allegedly plotting his death,

1:13.6

and he didn't quite fully see it coming.

1:18.5

So the question everyone asks is, how did he miss it?

1:23.9

That's a question we're going to explore, not just in this episode, but across this entire series throughout this week, five parts.

1:33.1

Before I go further, let me be clear about what this series is and what it isn't.

1:36.9

We're examining psychological patterns of coercive control, narcissistic abuse using the Corey Richens case's framework.

1:44.0

We're not diagnosing her or anyone else with a personality disorder.

1:47.3

I'm not qualified to do that, and I'm not attempting to do it here.

...

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