Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - “MOSCOW MULE” Mom Poisons Hubby, Writes “Script” of Lies for Witnesses?

Episode Date: October 27, 2023

Kouri Richins' book on how to deal with grief isn't the only thing she's written. There's a six-page handwritten letter that's sparking debate, "the walk the dog letter."  Prosecutors say that in the... letter, Richins is teaching people how to lie about what happened the night her husband died.  Her defense team says the letter was privileged information and wants the prosecutors to be sanctioned. It's called the "walk the dog letter," since that phrase is written in big letters on the top. In it,  Richins makes the claim that her husband Eric was addicted to drugs, that he would make frequent trips to Mexico to get pills, and that his death was an accidental overdose. The letter was written to Richins' mother, and it reportedly tells her to instruct Richins' brother to make the connection to Mexico and drugs when he talks about the case. The question the court has to answer is, does a defendant attempting to help coach someone on what they should say on the witness stand, rise to the level of witness tampering? Prosecutors say it does rise to the level of witness tampering because there is no connection between Kouri Richins' brother and drugs from Mexico. The prosecution believes, again, that  Richins is instructing people to lie. That is why the prosecution is asking the judge to disallow contact between Richins and her mother. Joining Nancy Grace Today: Donna Kelly– Former Utah Senior Deputy District Attorney and Attorney for Crime Victims Legal Clinic; Helped form the Utah County Sex Crimes Task Force Dr. Bethany Marshall – Psychoanalyst (Beverly Hills, CA); Instagram & TikTok: drbethanymarshall; Twitter: @DrBethanyLive Justin Boardman – Retired Detective, West Valley City Police Department Special Victim’s Unit, Boardman Training & Consulting Dr. William Morrone – Toxicologist, Chief Medical Examiner, Bay County Michigan; Author: “American Narcan: Naloxone & Heroin-Fentanyl Associated Mortality” Elaine Aradillas - Senior Crime Reporter at the Messenger; Twitter: @elaineja, Instagram: @the_elaineja See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an iHeart Podcast. Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. A young mom seemingly devastated when her husband dies of what appears to be a fentanyl overdose moved so deeply by her grief. She actually writes a children's book to deal with mourning and grieving. That would be so heartbreaking and touching if I didn't know she's charged with his murder. Yes, I'm talking about Corey Richens again. Now, believe it or not, after authorities allege that she poisons her husband dead, the father of her children, by giving him a Moscow mule laced with a huge OD of fentanyl. Now, according to reports, what is found in her room?
Starting point is 00:01:16 The written script. She's trying to cram down the throats of family to paint her as innocent. Ouch. That's terrible when the cops ransack your cell and they find you tampering with witnesses I hate when that happens I'm Nancy Grace this is crime stories thank you for being with us here at crime stories and on Sirius XM 111 I just want you to hear Corey Richens and I don't get it. She's a successful realtor. She flips these mega mansions and makes all kind of money.
Starting point is 00:01:49 She's got a husband who's not cheating, working, supporting the family, beautiful children, beautiful home. Why this? But I want you to hear it from the horse's mouth. Take a listen to Corey Richens describing why she wrote a kid's book. Listen to Crime Online. I'm new to all of this. Corey Richens appeared on Good Things Utah, a lifestyle TV program, to talk about her book on grief. She said she's done lots of research to help not only herself, but her children cope with the loss of Eric Richens, husband and father. Richens says what has helped her family are the three C's.
Starting point is 00:02:31 The three C's, you know, connection, continuity and care. Richens says it's important to make sure the spirit of your lost loved one is alive in your home by bringing up memories, talking about the person and doing things that person loved to do. OK, yeah, well, her husband, her dead husband's memory is going to be coming up a lot in her murder trial. But what about this script that has been found in her cell? And wait a minute.
Starting point is 00:03:02 Before I go any further, Elaine Artavias is with us, senior crime reporter with the messenger. Isn't it true that the woman has just come forward? I believe she worked for the family, a housekeeper who sold the Moscow mule mom, Corey Richens, who allegedly sold her the fentanyl she used to poison her husband. Hasn't that just happened? Yes, they do have texts between Corey and the housekeeper where Corey is requesting fentanyl or she's requesting, you know, the heavy drugs more of. And so that has come out that the housekeeper basically was dropping off drugs at various locations, allegedly for Corey. That housekeeper's future testimony does not jive with the story that this grief-stricken mom
Starting point is 00:04:03 is writing a grief book to help her children to keep the husband's memory alive. You know what? She can say it better than me. Let's listen to more of Corey Richens from Crime Online. Richens, appearing on Good Things Utah, said it's important to explain to children that just because a parent, in Richens' case the father, isn't present physically, that doesn't mean their presence isn't with the children. He's doing these things with us and he's, you know, here for birthdays and he's here for Christmas. Richens says now it's just comforting for her children to know they're not living this life alone. Dad is still here. It's just in a different way.
Starting point is 00:04:41 Yeah. Murdered. According to prosecutors. I'm about to jump into the ransacking of Corey Richen's cell and finding the script. But I just want you to hear more of Corey Richen speaking out about how much she wanted to console her grieving little children. And just so you know, those children, three little boys at the time, Carter nine, Ashton seven and Weston five. You know, it would have really helped them in life if they still had their dad alive. OK, but no, that's not going to happen. That said, more again from the horse's mouth. Listen, our friends crime online rich and says it's the family traditions that are hard for children, such as the parent typically with the child on the first day of school,
Starting point is 00:05:30 helping the child cope with what they're facing. She said in her appearance on good things, Utah, that acknowledging those types of things not only gives her peace, but the children as well. It's been a lot of peace for my kids to, you know, to really remember that in the back of their head that they're never alone. My rear end, Dr. Bethany Marshall, joining me, renowned psychoanalyst joining us out of L.A. at drbethanymarshall.com. Never alone. According to police, she's the reason that they are alone. You know, Nancy, sociopaths like her, they do evil things and they try to undo them. They do and they undo.
Starting point is 00:06:08 So she kills their father and then she tries to undo it by saying, oh, it's OK. He's always with you. Also, this woman tries to monetize everything. You know, she's always trying to make a buck, always trying to get more money. I think that's one of the motivations for killing her husband. get him out of the way so she can make more money. I think the children's book is just another way to monetize his death. And you know what? I want to pick up on what Dr. Bethany Marshall just said about the money. Elaine Otavius is with us, a senior investigative crime reporter with The Messenger.
Starting point is 00:06:43 Elaine, I'm about to jump into the manuscript manuscript as they are euphemistically calling it seized from her jail cell but there is so much money motive they had a prenup but she didn't like the prenup he had a very very successful business that he built up from scratch then there was the issue of flipping this mega mansion. She wanted to buy this mega mansion and then flip it. He opposed it and then he dies. And within seven days or so, she flips the mansion and then throws a big party,
Starting point is 00:07:21 a boozed up party to celebrate the flip with her husband cold in the grave. That's right. She repeatedly is acquiring money. In fact, when her husband died, the sister of the husband went to the house and Corey was already taking things out of the safe. There are things missing that cannot be accounted for that's considered valuable and assets. So over and over, there is a pattern of her trying to get more money. You know, Donna Kelly is joining me, former Utah senior deputy district attorney, lawyer for crime victims legal clinic. She also helped form the Utah County Sex Crimes Task Force. Donna Kelly, I know that after my fiance was murdered shortly before our wedding, he was on baseball scholarship and I wanted one thing. I wanted
Starting point is 00:08:27 his baseball that he and I would practice with, throw pitch back and forth. And I still have it. I see it every morning. I'm just curious about your reaction to immediately immediately after her husband's death she is in the safe getting out whatever assets she can find it's very disturbing nancy it is very disturbing and she had an ongoing dispute and her husband had an inkling that this was happening and made changes in his will to give things to his family as opposed to Corey Richens. So it all kind of fits together. The puzzle fits together. Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. Dr. William Maroney, truly a renowned medical examiner and toxicologist. He is the author of American Narcan. And Justin Boardman joining me, former detective
Starting point is 00:09:47 in Utah. And of course, that's this jurisdiction where the victim, Eric Richens, young man, 39 years old, the prime of his life, died a very terrible death. But I want to get to what was found in Corey Richens' cell. Listen to our Cut 5, Dave Mack. The Walk the Dog letter is a six-page, handwritten letter that Corey Richens wrote for her mother. Prosecutors claim the letter instructs her mother and brother to give false testimony in the case according to a motion filed in court. In the letter, Richens wrote, quote,
Starting point is 00:10:23 This comes down to jealousy, money, and Eric's partying that they don't want to acknowledge, and sadly, an accidental overdose, unquote. The prosecutors have asked the judge to restrict Richens from further engaging in witness tampering by restricting her from contacting her mother and brother. Defense attorney Skyla Zaro filed a brief accusing the prosecutors of breaching a gag order in the case when they filed the letter titled Walk the Dog as part of their motion. Okay, Elaine Otavias, tell me everything about the so-called Walk the Dog letter. The Walk the Dog letter, first of all, is named that because at the top of the letter, in huge type, all caps, she wrote, walk the dog.
Starting point is 00:11:10 I think you can sort of take from that that she was giving instructions to whoever this letter was written for. The state alleges that she was writing it to her mom with instructions of what to say. Hence, the state is alleging witness tampering. But this letter really sort of talks about, you know, it's almost like this what if, you know, and talking about what the drugs were for and how this accidentally happened. But in a conversation that she had with her brother, she's alleging that it's part of a fiction mystery novel. Okay, what? Repeat. She says that it's part of a fiction mystery novel.
Starting point is 00:11:56 I'm so happy. Elaine Adaviez, you just made me a very happy former prosecutor. So they are addressing the walk the dog six page letter that was found in her jail cell. And by the way, apparently when they came to and they found that she went into some kind of a seizure, never had a seizure before in her life, we've been told. But when they found that six page letter in her jail cell, she apparently suffered a seizure. Richens, the Moscow Mule mom, claims the letter instructed her mom to say her husband OD'd on drugs from Mexico, claims it is for a book she planned to write.
Starting point is 00:12:39 How is that part of a book she planned to write, Elaine Adavias, what does that have to do with the book? What's the plot of the book? Well, here's what's interesting. So the, they released a transcript that she had between her and her brother. And in that conversation that she had with her brother, she explains that this, she's written a 65 page novel novel and it's all about, you know, from the detention hearing and what happens. And then she gets out of jail and she and her father go to Mexico where they're dealing with a ranch and a cartel. She's saying this, that this is part of a 65-page novel, but that the jail deputies, they pulled out this six-page letter. She's claiming that this letter is actually part of a bigger novel and that they're picking and choosing. And on top of it all, she also claims that she wrote a letter on top of it saying that this is part of, you know, that events have been changed, but based on true,
Starting point is 00:13:55 you know, situations that have happened to her. And what kills me is that it was hidden inside an LSAT book. Law School Admissions Test Manual. about his ships to Mexico and that the dead husband revealed he had been given pain pills and fentanyls from workers on the ranch. Okay, let's hear some more. Take a listen to investigative reporting team from CrimeOnline.com. KUTV says in the Walk the Dog letter, Corey Richens allegedly wants her brother to say Eric Richens told him he got pain pills and fentanyl from Mexico through workers at a ranch. She allegedly points out how Ronnie's testimony could make the connection of Eric and drugs.
Starting point is 00:14:55 In the letter, Corey Richens allegedly says the testimony, quote, can be short and to the point, but has to be done, unquote. Richens also tells her mother to pass information to her brother in person, telling her mother her home and phone could be bugged. So pass the information verbally and in person because the home and phone could be bugged. Let's get to the crux of this entire scenario, and that is the gruesome death, the horrible death of a very loving 39-year-old
Starting point is 00:15:28 dad who was working like a dog to support Corey Richens and their mega mansion and their three little boys as young as age five. This is what happened. Take a listen to our friends at Crime Online. According to court documents, Corey Richens called police to their Utah home where her husband, Eric Richens, was found dead in the early morning hours of March 4th, 2022. Investigators said Corey had given Eric a drink, a Moscow Mule, before he went to bed. She then spent part of the night with one of her three children who had a nightmare. According to court documents, in her written statement the night of his death, she said when she returned to their bedroom at approximately 3 a.m., he was cold to the touch, and she called 911. It was later determined that Eric had five times the lethal dose of fentanyl in his system,
Starting point is 00:16:19 which officials said had been ingested orally. Joining me right now is the world's premier authority on fentanyl and fentanyl ingestion and fentanyl OD and also how to revive someone from a fentanyl overdose. Dr. William Maroney, the author of American Narcan, Nalaxone and Heroin Fentanyl Associated Mortality. This guy, this doctor, is using his medical degree to help people with fentanyl addiction to the point he has invested his own money and all his years of education and experience to create a traveling mobile unit to help those addicted to fentanyl. Dr. William Maroney, this whole story stinks to high heaven. But first of all, explain what happens when you get a fentanyl OD.
Starting point is 00:17:23 What happens? What do you experience? Well, however you ingest it, if you swallow it, if you snort it, if you inject it, whatever happens, it goes to your brain, goes in your blood,
Starting point is 00:17:34 goes to your brain, and it goes to a place in your brain that controls your breathing. And slowly, you breathe shallow, infrequent, less and less and you suffocate. You go through asphyxia. You lose all your oxygen and your heart starts pumping and you stop breathing and it's got to be one of the scariest things in the world.
Starting point is 00:18:07 It's like being locked in a tomb. Darkness. You can't get out. And your body doesn't work. And your muscles don't work. And you get weaker and weaker. And eventually, if you can be reached with Narcan before your final breath the Narcan, you die. And you stop breathing in two to three minutes, and you have six minutes before there's irreversible damage in your brain.
Starting point is 00:19:01 We get a lot of people to hospital that have been fentanyl overdoses, and the families keep them around for a couple days. They keep them on ventilators, hope they're coming back. But they're brain dead. So you really need that intervention early. You need all pain and addiction patients in America should have Narcan in their home. And you know what the honest God truth is, everybody with small children should have Narcan in their home for accidents because this fentanyl stuff is everywhere. It's on dollar bills. It's in other drugs. It could be coming out of grocery stores or things that you touch at the gas station. We're in a fentanyl crisis. This is not an opioid crisis. Fentanyl is so far out of control, it's equivalent to a weapon of mass destruction. Dr. Maroney, say I had a fentanyl overdose.
Starting point is 00:19:53 Have you ever been asleep and you're trying to wake up, but you can't wake up? Or would it be like being inside a coffin and little by little, you know, you're dying and you run out of air? And talk to me and regular people talk, Dr. Maroney. I mean, what would he, Eric Richens, experience? All of the people I know that have come to me that have overdosed on fentanyl, but they got the Narcan, they came back and now they're in treatment with medication assisted treatment. They all say there's a rush of heat in the body as the fentanyl goes through the bloodstream. And then slowly, you lose all consciousness. And what you described was sleep paralysis, where you're kind of in bed and you can think, but you can't move. Sometimes you can't talk. Not being able to breathe has got to be the scariest thing in
Starting point is 00:20:54 the world. I would rather be cut in half and smashed with a car and shot 100 times and lit on fire than not being able to breathe. If you can't breathe, nothing else matters. And the idea that somebody would put fentanyl, the toxic dose of fentanyl is two milligrams. That's equivalent to 12 to 14 granules out of a salt shaker at the breakfast diner. If you shake salt on the table and you can get 10 or 12 or 14 granules, that's enough fentanyl to kill you. And a full teaspoon is enough to kill everybody in the room. Well, I got to tell you, Dr. Maroney, I saw reports where I believe it was a lady cop was on a crime scene and she nearly died because the report was she touched fentanyl unwittingly. And I thought, wow, that that doesn't ring true to me because I've in court handled so many drugs with my bare hands and nothing ever happened.
Starting point is 00:22:04 But it actually is true, isn't it? It is. And it is the amount of fentanyl that touches the skin and gets absorbed. It's happened in the deputies in the surrounding counties around us. All the deputies try to carry two Narcans. One is for patients or, you know, when they're chasing people down or drug overdoses, and one is for their partners. We have to have narcan and even gloves. Sometimes you got to be careful because those masks are a joke with fentanyl. They don't stop fentanyl, but people touching crime scenes, turning envelopes over. So that is what is being discussed here that Eric Richens, the dad of three, OD'd on fentanyl.
Starting point is 00:22:53 But now what about a Moscow mule? Justin Boardman, just in time, former detective in this jurisdiction, Utah West Valley City PD. Now Boardman training and consultant, Justin Boardman, what's a Moscow Mule? Well, Moscow Mule is one of my favorite beverages, but it would be vodka and ginger beer with a twist of lime. Now, ginger beer, we all had at Universal and Harry Potter Land. It's very tangy. I love it. It's not actually beer. Or is it beer? Because children can get it.
Starting point is 00:23:32 Maybe it's more ginger than anything else. And ginger has a very strong taste, which would conceal fentanyl. I mean, yes, no, Dr. Maroney. Yes, no. Does fentanyl taste like anything?
Starting point is 00:23:47 Fentanyl's bitter. You need to have some strong, pungent, sour, sweet flavoring. Like ginger beer. Okay, so Justin Boardman, the theory, the working theory, I mean, you're the detective. This is your jurisdiction. The theory is that she put fentanyl, a huge OD amount, into the ginger beer. Yes, no. Yes, and that's the theory that it was taken orally and was hidden in the Moscow mule that he had that evening and passed from.
Starting point is 00:24:20 We're never going to know if she handed him that glass or if he just drank it on his own, but that's when you fall back on circumstantial evidence. Take a listen to this. Evidence gathered revealed Corey claimed she didn't have access to her phone that night. She said it was left on the charger by her bed while she was in another room tending a sick child. However, a data dump shows Richen's phone was in use during the time her husband was dying and that sent messages had been deleted. Additional evidence showed Richens was in contact with a drug dealer in Ogden leading up to her husband's death. The legal documents state she received both hydrocodone pills and fentanyl from the dealer. The claim was that the drugs were intended for a client experiencing back pain,
Starting point is 00:25:07 even specifically asking for, quote, the Michael Jackson stuff, unquote, meaning fentanyl. Information from the autopsy report determined Eric Richens died from an overdose of fentanyl five times the lethal dosage. Elaine Adavias joining us, senior investigative crime reporter with The Messenger. Elaine, again, thank you for being with us. You know, the cover up is deadly in this case. Deleting text messages. You know what? My phone can barely work. I've got so many emails and text messages on. I never think to delete anything. I mean, there are messages on there from 2015 and 16.
Starting point is 00:25:48 Yes. So the fact that you suddenly have the urge to delete a bunch of texts and emails, which, of course, anybody can get from the cloud. But that said, explain to me, Elaine Adavias, she said her phone was in a different room that that night of all nights she went and slept with her boys while her husband died, killed over in the other room. But yet when authorities searched, they found out the phone was actually in use the entire time and that those particular texts had been deleted. Do I have that right? Could you explain that, please, Elaine? Yes. I think, you know, a lot of times, especially, you know, with all the shows we see and all
Starting point is 00:26:33 these previous cases, we see, you know, before, you know, they try to do, they try to take care of everything. You know, they have Googled, you know, how do I clean up this or whatever. And somehow they always forget about the phone. The phone has the ability to be tracked because everyone has like find my phone or, you know, the cell towers. They can see movement. They can, you know, when investigators, they have forensic investigators, when they subpoena your phone and they start going through it, they can see when it turned on, when it moved, all of these things. And so I think, you know, we will find out more about
Starting point is 00:27:20 it in court when forensic investigators explain what they found but thus far we know that the phone was in use so which puts a crack in her story already a big crack because if you got your phone you can call 9-1-1 immediately and does that mean she wasn't really even in the children's room when she's right there watching the husband die donna Kelly, joining me, former Utah senior deputy district attorney, this jurisdiction, Donna Kelly, the deleting the texts and the emails, the phone movements, it reminds me significantly of the Alex Murdoch double murder prosecution where he was charged in the murder of his wife, Maggie, and son, Paul. The forensic evidence showed that he was charged in the murder of his wife Maggie and son Paul. The forensic evidence showed that he was at the dog kennels where his wife and son were murdered, riddled with bullets, because of his cell phone and because of another cell phone video.
Starting point is 00:28:17 It placed him there. The phone then followed him to his vehicle. The phone traveled with him and his wife Maggie's phone. Then her phone is thrown out of the car, linked with the navigation system in his vehicle. I believe it was a Suburban. It shows every move he made from letting the windows up and down to the speed to the ignition turn. You name it. Technology is a very powerful
Starting point is 00:28:48 tool in the prosecutor's arsenal, Donna Kelly. Absolutely. And the reason that juries love this kind of evidence is it's very objective. It doesn't have a bias. It doesn't have an agenda. It's just there. And so that evidence is very powerful to a jury. And it also shows the consciousness of guilt that the person has, for example, in deleting messages, you know, immediately, that sort of thing. So it can show, you know, the movement and the messages that went in and out, but it can also show consciousness of your own guilt. You're right. So the state will then begin looking at other circumstantial evidence, evidence contemporaneous around the time of the death. Take a listen to this. After Eric Richens' death, Corey Richens hired a locksmith to open Eric's safe.
Starting point is 00:29:49 Between $125,000 and $165,000 was reportedly inside. When Eric Richens' sister told her sister-in-law she didn't have the rights to those funds, Corey Richens punched her. Eric Richens had also opened a living trust and placed the trust as his life insurance beneficiary instead of Corey. We now know Corey had purchased at least four life insurance policies on Eric Richens with death benefits of over a million dollars. Okay, Dr. Bethany Marshall, renowned psycho analyst, joining us out of Beverly Hills. I'll tell you one thing. If my husband, David Lynch, goes out and takes four life insurance policies out on me, uh-uh, Uh-uh. N-O.
Starting point is 00:30:27 Mm-mm. We're splitting up at that moment, and I'm taking the twins. Period. He can have everything else except those twins. Four life insurance policies? What? You know, Nancy, when I listen to this story, so I think of Corey Richens as suffering what I affectionately term the Casey Anthony syndrome.
Starting point is 00:30:50 Every lie, every maneuver, every motive is so flagrantly transparent. And from a mental health perspective, she's probably suffering from what we call cluster B. Cluster B is when you have sociopathy. Are you saying cluster? Cluster. Cluster, like a cluster bomb. Okay. So when you have sociopathy, borderline personality disorder, and potentially bipolar. I don't even know what you're saying. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. She's greedy. greedy she wants money what are you talking about cluster what okay so so sociopathy they lie they con they manipulate they have parasitic lifestyle so there you have the money motive borderline personality disorder there's clinging and rejecting behavior they can
Starting point is 00:31:40 plot and plan forever bipolar where where they get in such a certain type of mood where they feel no guilt or consciousness or remorse. So she has all these things swirling around. And that's why the story just gets crazier and crazier. And like Casey Anthony, everyone from the outside looking in can say, that's a lie. That's a lie. That's a lie. That's a lie. How can she not know that we know she's lying? And that's what happens with these kinds of personalities. They don't see in themselves what we see in them. And that's why the family went over to check the safe. That's why they caught her is that they had been observing this for a long, long time. Well, there's more to the
Starting point is 00:32:27 money motive. And I can't wait for Dr. Maroney to jump in on how many dead bodies he's autopsied that are dead because of money motive. Listen to this. Investigators say Eric Richens was looking into a divorce. He had recently changed his will and life insurance from his wife to his sister. Two friends told detectives that Eric Richens was worried Corey would kill him for the money and wanted to ensure that his kids were taken care of financially. Even as Corey Richens was promoting her children's book about grief on local television, investigators were looking into the couple's troubled past. I've watched that interview a million times and never once did this woman shed a tear. Dr. William Maroney, renowned medical examiner, the love of money, the root of all evil.
Starting point is 00:33:16 What do you think about that, Maroney? It's really a good reason. It's at the top of the list. Money is it's it's like worse than love and infidelity because you can just enjoy it all by yourself. It's sinful, and it's in every culture, and it's in every country, and whether it's male or female, it's always about the money. And what I'm really worried about, somebody this reckless. People will reproduce this. And what happens, fentanyl is so dangerous, she could have accidentally killed her children. You're right.
Starting point is 00:33:55 The three little boys in the same home. What if one of them had taken a sip of that Moscow mule? Even if they would have touched fentanyl on the counter or there there was fentanyl dust and and something like that is just to poison somebody with fentanyl when there's small children in the room that's insane fentanyl dust remember maroney dr maroney we just covered the case of a little one-year-old boy who died in a daycare from fentanyl in new york dust it in. The daycare was a front for dope. He breathed and we think or touched fentanyl. Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. Guys, here's the kicker.
Starting point is 00:34:53 This is not the first time, according to LA law enforcement, that Corey Richens tried to murder her husband. Listen to the investigative reporting team at Crime Stories. Valentine's Day 2022. Eric Richens becomes violently ill after suffering an allergic reaction after having dinner with his wife of nine years, Corey. He breaks out in hives, can't breathe, passes out after using his son's EpiPen and taking Benadryl. When Eric wakes up, he calls his business partner, Cody Wright, to let him know what has just happened. Then, without Corey knowing, Eric changes the beneficiary of his will and his power of attorney, replacing his wife, Corey, with his sister. Legal paperwork suggests that Eric believes Corey might kill him for the money, and he wants his children to be financially secure. Kind of reminds me of cult mom Lori Vallow. Her husband was afraid that she would kill him.
Starting point is 00:35:51 So he changed a lot of his financial setup away from her. And she killed him anyway, had him killed anyway, not knowing that she was no longer his beneficiary. That said, this reminds me of another incredible case. And, you know, I couldn't make this up. Do you remember the name Dahlia DiPolito? Reportedly a former escort who marries the victim. She sets up a hit. She sets up a shooting hit to kill him and get money and a townhome. But of course she sets it up with an undercover agent and he's got it all on tape planning to kill her husband, Dahlia DiPolito. So apparently she tried to kill him before in a poison Starbucks latte of some sort. Didn't work.
Starting point is 00:36:53 So she tries again. According to him, he lives. The undercover agent stops the hit, but they pretend to her. This is a sting that they're coming to tell her her husband has been attacked and he's dead. Now, Meryl Streep, I love you, lady, but move over because Dahlia DiPolito may beat you out for your next Oscar. Listen to Dahlia DiPolito reacting to news her husband is dead. I'm Sergeant Ramsey. I'm the one that called you. Thank you for coming. I'm sorry to call you.
Starting point is 00:37:29 Listen, we had a report of a disturbance at your house, and there were shots fired. Is your husband Michael? Okay, I'm sorry to tell you, ma'am, he's been killed. No, no, no, no, no. He's been killed, ma'am. No, no, no, no, no. Try to calm down. No, no, no, no, no. Listen, calm down. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:37:45 Right now, we need to get you to the station. We need to get you to our police station. I want to see him. I can't let you see him, ma'am. We have to do our job. If you want us to find this killer, okay, we need you to calm down. I'm going to need you to go with these detectives, okay? Does he have enemies?
Starting point is 00:38:01 Is there anyone that would want to hurt him? Okay, who would want to hurt him? Witnesses said they saw a black male running from him. I can't let you see him, ma'am. Ma'am, I cannot do this right now. Ma'am, I can't do it. Detective Yopi, I need you to take her to the station. I can't. Ma'am, go with these detectives.
Starting point is 00:38:18 If you want to help your husband, okay? If you want to help your husband, you need to go to the station with these gentlemen. And tell us everything you know about who he knows, who he's connected to. Don't worry, we've already taken care of dogs with animal control for right now. Everything's under control. There's more, but I just listen to that all day. Did you hear that, Donna Kelly? That was Dahlia DiPolito when she's told her husband's dead.
Starting point is 00:38:42 He's not dead. Later at the police station, they're questioning her and he walks by. He goes, hi, you tried to kill me. But in this case, now we're getting this very long letter where obviously Corey Richens, Moscow mule mom, is trying to convince her family to lie about her husband traveling to Mexico to get these drugs. Yes, that evidence is going to be explosive and very powerful in front of the jury. And compounding the actual letter is also the evidence that she's trying to manufacture excuses for writing it. She says at first it was written for her lawyer's benefit,
Starting point is 00:39:27 so it's privileged. Well, that's obviously a lie because right in the letter, she refers to her lawyer by name. Tell my brother to go talk to the name of her lawyer. So obviously it's not written for the lawyer. But also then now she had to concoct a new lie because that one didn't fly. So you have not only the letter with the instructions of how to lie, but you have her excuses for writing it, which compounds, again, shows her consciousness of her own guilt. While she is having some type of a seizure, guards search her cell, find a copy of a bombshell letter instructing her own mother to fuel conspiracy theories that her dead husband had a drug problem and overdosed. He was at work every day working,
Starting point is 00:40:21 trying to pay for that mega mansion they were living in. In the letter, she reportedly asked her, the mother, to get her brother to concoct a story. The husband, a year before his death, secretly told the brother he would get pain pills and fentanyl from a ranch hand in Mexico. She wrote that she would also say her husband asked the caterer, an alleged drug dealer, to hook him up with more when actually that housekeeper caterer says that she, Corey Richens, is the one wanting the money. So this is an incredible development in the case. Oh, by the way, I don't know if you guys knew this, but Justin Boardman in the
Starting point is 00:41:06 Dahlia DiPolito case, she then claimed something similar to what Moscow Mule Mom is saying. She claimed that was a script. It was all a setup. They were all acting for a reality show. The way Corey Richens is saying, oh, that letter telling everybody what to say about my husband being a dope head, that was part of a manuscript. That's the ticket. A manuscript of a book I was writing. It's not going to work. No, that is a lot of drama, if you will. It also reminds me of a case that was investigated a couple of cubicles over from my own. And that was the Susan and Josh Powell case where Susan had put a letter in her work file at work that if she disappeared or died, that Josh probably did it. It's very interesting to me to see these sort of people get these intuitions that that they might get offed by their significant other like he did as well. He really did. And you can read
Starting point is 00:42:17 the entire letter at CrimeOnline.com. But it goes on to say, if you could read it it says I need Eric Eric told Romney he gets pain pillars from Mexico you may have to testify to this Romney should have gotten text from Eric talking about getting high. I mean, it goes on and on describing what would help her if they said it on the stand. Nancy, can I jump in? Yes, please jump in. Well, you know, not only is she witness tampering, but this is one more example of criminals embroiling their families in their crimes. They don't just take themselves down. They take everyone else down around them.
Starting point is 00:43:10 I mean, if you read it, it goes on to talk about how you may have to testify to this. Maybe something like he gets high every night and won't help take care of the kids. It just goes on and on and on. Remember, Casey Anthony accused her brother and her father of molesting her. And, you know, all these things, there's this thoughtless attitude. There's this callous disregard for family members. So the family members are used just as much as she used her husband. She used the press.
Starting point is 00:43:44 She used her own children without any thought to the consequences. This case is heading to trial. Isn't that true, Elaine Adavious? Yes. I mean, that's the goal. But there are so many more hearings that are coming up that, I mean, the next one, they're actually going to argue whether it should be dismissed. That's what her attorney filed based on this letter. That's straight out of the defense playbook.
Starting point is 00:44:15 Remember, they just tried that in the Brian Koberger case. It didn't work. We wait as this trial unfolds. Goodbye, friend.

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