Richins trial live: Judge denies motion for directed verdict as prosecution rests

Kouri Richins sits during the 12th day of her jury trial on Wednesday. Prosecutors are reaching the end of presenting their evidence.

Kouri Richins sits during the 12th day of her jury trial on Wednesday. Prosecutors are reaching the end of presenting their evidence. (David Chernak)


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Estimated read time: 3-4 minutes

KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Prosecutors rested in Kouri Richins' murder trial after the lead investigator's testimony on Thursday.
  • Detective O'Driscoll confirmed no fentanyl was found in the Richins' home, but said there was a "boatload of fentanyl" in Eric Richins' stomach.
  • Richins' attorneys argued there was insufficient evidence for a guilty verdict, but the judge declined to issue a directed verdict.

PARK CITY — Prosecutors have rested their case in the Park City murder trial for Kouri Richins, a Kamas mother accused of fatally poisoning her husband.

Defense attorneys then moved for a ruling that there was insufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to convict Richins, a standard motion made in many trials after the prosecution presents its evidence. The judge denied the motion for a directed verdict.

Prosecutors say some memes were accessed on Richins' phone on the morning her husband died, including one with Donald Trump saying, "I'm really rich," one with a man that said "Idiots, Idiots everywhere," and another with a woman using money to wipe her eyes.

An investigator who previously reviewed her phone testified that he couldn't say who had sent those memes or whether Richins herself had viewed them that morning on her phone, but the images had been viewed on her phone at 8:29 a.m. that day.

During questioning from defense attorney Kathy Nester on Thursday, Summit County sheriff's detective Jeff O'Driscoll verified that on the morning of Eric Richins' death, someone using Kouri Richins' phone also viewed photos Eric Richins had sent his wife the day before, indicating that other messages had been viewed at the same time the memes were viewed.

O'Driscoll also said investigators found a bag of loose hydrocodone pills in the mudroom cabinet in the house that were tested and did not contain fentanyl. He said investigators did not find fentanyl on anything tested in the house.

O'Driscoll confirmed the investigation has lasted four years, and detectives have issued search warrants as recently as last month.

"In all of that, we have no murder weapon, like you haven't found anything that was connected to Eric's death, no fentanyl, correct?" Nester asked.

"There was a boatload of fentanyl in his stomach that came out of the house with him," O'Driscoll replied.

Before his testimony, attorneys discussed allowing officers to testify about interactions with a man who reported Eric Richins had asked him about getting fentanyl in 2019.

Third District Judge Richard Mrazik previously said the man could not testify about the interaction because it was hearsay. He said Thursday if the defense uses the information to support a theory that the investigation was incomplete, prosecutors would be able to counter that by admitting that Carmen Lauber's boyfriend said in a jail call on March 4, 2022, that she had "just made money selling fentanyl."

That conversation came up in previous testimony, but fentanyl was swapped for "illicit street drugs" in testimony to the jury.

"This is high-stakes poker," Mrazik said, referring to the decision Richins' attorneys needed to make about whether to bring up the tip. They decided not to at this point in the trial.

The Kamas mom and real estate agent is accused of killing Eric Richins on March 4, 2022, with fentanyl. She is also accused of slipping drugs into his food, making him sick, on Valentine's Day in 2022. Her trial is scheduled to last until March 27.

Kouri Richins is charged with aggravated murder and attempted aggravated murder, first-degree felonies, two counts of insurance fraud, a second-degree felony, and forgery, a third-degree felony.

Watch the trial here:

This story will be updated.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Emily Ashcraft, KSLEmily Ashcraft
Emily Ashcraft is a reporter for KSL. She covers issues in state courts, health and religion. In her spare time, Emily enjoys crafting, cycling and raising chickens.
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