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True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Kouri Richins: What an FBI Profiler Saw in the Years Before Eric Died

True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Tony Brueski

News Commentary, True Crime, News

4.2612 Ratings

🗓️ 21 February 2026

⏱️ 21 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary


The insurance policies started in 2015. By 2017, prosecutors say Kouri Richins had positioned nearly $2 million on her husband Eric's life—without his knowledge. When he discovered her alleged financial fraud in 2020, he met with a divorce attorney. Eighteen months later, he was dead.

Robin Dreeke spent his FBI career reading the behavioral patterns that precede violence. His "Life Arc" framework asks not just what someone did, but what made them capable of it. In this Hidden Killers conversation, we apply that framework to the Kouri Richins case—examining the prosecution's timeline through the eyes of someone trained to assess threats before they materialize.

The compressed timeline is what stands out. Prosecutors allege Kouri obtained fentanyl on February 11, 2022. On Valentine's Day, they say she left a poisoned sandwich in Eric's truck—he survived. On February 26th, she allegedly went back to her supplier asking for "something stronger." By March 4th, Eric was gone. Robin explains what that escalation pattern reveals about psychological state—and why a failed attempt typically increases rather than decreases risk.

But the foundation was laid years before. Financial fraud. Falsified documents. A Power of Attorney Eric never signed. When he confronted her in 2020, something shifted. Robin breaks down what happens to someone's behavioral baseline when their deception is exposed and divorce becomes a real threat.

Trial begins February 23rd. Five weeks. Twelve jurors. This conversation provides the behavioral lens for understanding the patterns they'll see—the years of positioning, the escalation, and the trajectory that allegedly led to a Moscow Mule laced with five times the lethal dose of fentanyl.

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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 #RobinDreeke #FBIProfiler #LifeInsuranceFraud #FentanylPoisoning #UtahMurder #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #BehavioralAnalysis

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Hidden Killers with Tony Brewski. Here now, Tony Brucey.

0:06.8

Well, before Corey Richens allegedly poisoned her husband, Eric, with fentanyl in March of 2022,

0:13.0

there were patterns. Financial pressures, marital fractures, escalating behaviors, that to a trained

0:20.3

behavioral analyst might have signaled

0:22.7

what was coming.

0:24.5

Well, you're in luck today, because we have one of those with us.

0:28.0

Robin Drake, retired FBI Special Agency for the Counterintelligence Behavioral Analysis Program

0:32.5

and author of many books on the topic.

0:36.5

Let me grab this one here, like sizing people up.

0:40.6

Yeah, this is a case. We've now, you know, we've been talking on and off about it for like,

0:45.9

I think since I've met you. So like three years or so. And you've talked, you know, we talked

0:53.1

about life arcs on the show.

0:54.3

You talk about it in your books and stuff as the formative experiences and pressures

1:00.6

that shape someone's decision making under stress.

1:04.7

Prosecutors in here in this case are alleging Corey Richens took out multiple life insurance

1:09.6

policies on her husband,

1:11.4

totaling nearly two million between 2015 and 2017, without his knowledge,

1:16.2

then applied for yet another policy in late January 2022, weeks before his death.

1:22.1

When you see this happening, it's not just kind of a one-off, it's not like, oh, way back,

1:26.4

we did this life and shit, it's like, eh, uh, oh, and then, oh, God, this happened. What are you looking at here when you see that kind of

1:34.8

long-term positioning paired with the escalating financial desperation? Let's tell you about

1:40.3

where someone is on their behavioral trajectory.

...

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