Criminology - Eric Richins
Episode Date: May 31, 2026On March 4, 2022, Kouri Richins called 911 after finding her husband unresponsive in their home in Kamas, Utah. Eric was only 39 years old and appeared healthy before his sudden death. An autopsy late...r revealed Eric died from a fentanyl overdose estimated at roughly five times the lethal dose. Investigators noted there was no known history of opioid abuse. Join Mike and Morf as they discuss the murder of Eric Richins. Police began to zero in on Kouri, and what they uncovered during their investigation included allegations of financial fraud, poisonings, affairs, and life insurance schemes. You can help support the show through Patreon. We'd love to connect with listeners on social media. We are available on the following platforms: Facebook - Facebook Discussion group - Instagram - Threads - X Formerly Twitter - Blue Sky - Twitch - Tik Tok Criminology is an Emash Digital production hosted by Mike Ferguson and Mike Morford.
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Hello everyone and welcome to episode 412 of the criminology podcast.
I'm Mike Ferguson.
And this is Mike Morford.
Morph, what's going on, buddy?
I'm getting ready for Vegas.
This episode is coming out when we're in Vegas.
So I am, you know, planning that and packing and all that last minute stuff pretty
excited about it. How are you doing? Yeah, I'm actually in the same boat, man. I got Vegas and then I think
I've said it on the podcast before, but I have a week at home and then we're heading to Jamaica for my
my daughter's wedding. So we got a lot going on over here at the Ferguson household. Getting those frequent
flyer miles. Yeah, no doubt. For a guy who doesn't travel much, it's a lot of travel. Let's go ahead and
give our Patreon shoutouts. We had Erica Barnett and Colleen Festman. So great new support.
we really appreciate it.
Thank you so much that really helps to show out.
And for anyone else that would like to help us out, head over to patreon.com slash criminology to get started.
All right, buddy, let's go ahead and jump into this week's case.
And we're discussing a case that has been in the news a bit, the March 22 murder of Eric Richens.
It has sort of been developing, right, going through the legal system.
And now that a sentence has been handed out in this case, we can finally discuss.
it and include an outcome. Thanks to a complicated investigation and multiple delays, the case took
a few years to make it to trial. The headlines made it seem like the trial would be a total
circus. But thankfully, that factored in very little, and the jury was able to focus in on the
facts of the case. On March 4, 2022, Corey Richens called 911 to report that her husband,
Eric, was dead. She said she found him in bed and that he was cold to the test.
touch. Officers responded to the home in Camus, Utah, at 3.31 a.m. Shortly after, he was officially
pronounced dead. It was clear to first responders that Eric had been dead for some time. Everyone that
knew him was shocked by his death. He was only 39, and he was in great shape due to the physical
nature of his job. Eric had his own business. He was the co-owner of C&E Stone Masonry. Everything
had been fine with him the night before. Eric had been in good spirits and didn't seem to be sick
at all. In fact, Eric and others had been celebrating together. There were zero signs that when
Eric went to bed, he would never wake up. Corey and Eric married in June of 2013. At the time,
they had one young son, and they would go on to have two more. In 2019, Corey started a real estate
company called Kay Richens Realty LLC. She started flipping homes here and there. They seemed like a
successful happy couple. But just under a decade after their marriage, Eric was dead.
Their three sons had no father. Corey was left to explain the situation to them. But an autopsy
would reveal that Eric had not suffered some sudden tragic medical emergency or died from an
illness. He had died from an overdose of fentanyl, approximately five times the lethal dose.
As far as anyone knew, Eric didn't use opiates. He did. He did. He did. He did. He did. He did. He was a overdose of fent, a
He did drink and he did use marijuana gummies for sleep in pain after a long day,
but an accidental overdose of fentanyl was just out of the question.
Investigators didn't recover any paraphernalia regarding fentanyl, heroin, or pain pills from Eric's home,
other than an empty and expired pain pill prescription bottle from 2016.
Corey believes that the pills were hidden in a bottle of allergy medication that Eric kept in his work truck,
but his business partner picked the truck up before it was ever searched.
No hidden fentanyl pills were ever found.
There was a baggy in the mudroom that contained 11 hydrocodone pills.
These could have been the remaining pills from the expired bottle
or something from one of the other drug deals we'll talk about later.
But it wasn't hydrocodone that killed Eric and none was found in the system.
And more if you know, one of the things that jumps out at me here is they find this pain pill prescription bottle,
but it's like from six years earlier.
So unless, you know, he's got a bunch of hidden stuff or, you know, stuff they didn't find.
I mean, that's a pretty long time ago to still have some pills laying around that, you know,
you took for some kind of accident or whatever it was for, some type of pain, but didn't even take
them all.
And six years later, they're still lying around in a pill bottle.
Yeah, I think usually most people will get rid of that medication, although I'm sort of guilty of keeping prescriptions and never finishing them and just keeping them up in the cabinet and every once in a while, go through and get rid of them.
But to have one that old, it doesn't seem like it's fresh and being used.
But I think what was important was that everyone that knew Eric said there's no way this is what killed him because he wasn't a drug user.
He didn't use fentanyl.
So, you know, I think everyone was taken aback by this.
Marijuana gummies were found during a second search of the home, either missed in the
first search or placed thereafter.
Eric was also prescribed naltrexone, which is medication that helps manage the usage of
alcohol and opiates.
The medication basically blocks the euphoric feeling from getting intoxicated or can even
make you incredibly sick when you take it when you're already hot. While it's normally prescribed
to people with substance use issues, it's also prescribed off label for pain due to Lyme disease,
which Eric had. Hardly any of it was missing, though, which indicated that he didn't take it often.
If you're an addict, once you start taking naltrexone, you really can't stop immediately or you
will get sick. It's kind of something you either regularly,
use or you don't use it all unless you're using it as needed for pain.
Also found in Eric's system was about half of a 25 milligram pills of Seraquo, an antipsychotic
sedative medication.
Corey had a prescription for it supposedly for sleep.
The question was, why was Corey's prescription in Eric's system?
And one thing jumped out to me was that these marijuana guns.
were found during the second search of the home, they were either missed the first time around
or a place or after that.
I think either of this is pretty concerning.
If you're looking for a cause of death and looking for drugs specifically, how do you miss
them if you're the police?
And if you're not the police that missed them and somebody put them there after, then who
and why would they do that?
Yeah, I think that's a mystery.
the Serequil being in, you know, Eric's system, when it's Corey's prescription, that's a mystery.
Suspicion's turned toward Corey.
Her behavior both before and after Eric's death certainly didn't help her position.
A year after Eric's death, Corey published a children's book about grief and loss called,
Are You With Me?
She also emailed the local TV show, Good Things, Utah, and applied to be featured in a segment.
According to corpTV.com, her letter read in part,
I have just written what appears to be the first children's book about losing a parent.
She claimed she wanted to promote it on the show to help parents comfort their children with such a tragic life event.
She also claimed that she and her children wrote it together,
but she actually used a ghost writing service paying someone else to write it for her.
Maybe if things were as perfect for the couple as Corey tried to make everyone think,
the book wouldn't have seen so out of place.
but it seemed to be a way for Corey to make money off of Eric's death.
Investigators were sure that Eric had not accidentally overdosed,
and they believed that money was the main motivation for Eric's murder,
and his wife was to blame,
and that she had been planning it for years.
So obviously, Morph, Corey's not looking real good right now, right?
At this point, the police are very suspicious of her.
You've got this children's book, which, you know,
I guess on its face could seem benign, but then when you dig in, some of the things around it don't seem to, you know, make her look good.
Obviously, you and I have done so many episodes.
And a lot of them do center around, you know, the death of one partner by another.
And there are a lot of motivations that come into play.
But the big ones, you know, are usually money.
or wanting to be with someone else while not giving up money.
A lot of it centers around money.
Yeah, a lot of times when spouses are suspected of murder, murdering their partner,
many times at the root of it, it has to do with money.
So financial gain, life insurance, those kinds of things.
It's one of the oldest motives for murdering a spouse.
Well, let's face it, money is a big motivator for most people, right?
And not always to do with murder.
It just motivates people in general.
So it would make sense, though, that it would also be a motive for murder.
Authorities believe Corey's plan to kill Eric started years before he died.
Between 2015 and 2017, Corey purchased four different life insurance policies on Eric with herself as
the beneficiary totaling nearly $2 million.
Eric was completely unaware of the policies, and investigators believe she forged his
signature.
She kept a lot from Eric financially.
She took out a home equity line of credit on her home in excess of $200,000 without
telling him.
She took $134,000 that C&E Masonry owed in taxes.
More than $100,000 had been withdrawing.
Ron from his various accounts and his credit cards had $30,000 over.
She also used banking statements from Eric's company to fraudulently secure funds for her own
business.
She was in dire need of money because she was not as successful as she made herself out
to be.
To say that Corey had put the couple in serious financial troubles would be an understatement.
By late 2020, Eric apparently realized that something was wrong with Corey's bookkeeping.
and it seems he was looking into what had happened.
In October, he met with an estate lawyer and created a living trust for his three boys.
The beneficiary wasn't his wife, Corey, the mother of his children.
Instead, he named his sister, Katie Richens Benson, as beneficiary to the trust.
That lawyer, Crystal Bowman Carter, told 48 hours that Eric's goal was to protect the three young sons he and Corey had together in the long term
by ensuring that Corey would never be in a position to manage his property after his death.
In November, Eric removed Corey as the beneficiary of his $500,000 life insurance policy.
Everything he had a stake in was moved over to his sister Katie.
If anything happened to Eric, it would be Katie's job to step in and decide what to do with his assets and his business.
And to me, Morph, this is such a big move to make.
And I think it speaks directly to what Eric had uncovered or what he was thinking, right,
to move everything that you know of, because there are a lot of things that Eric doesn't know of at this point,
but to move everything that you know of into your sister's name, make her the beneficiary and not your wife.
I think that speaks volumes to what he had already uncovered or,
you know, the suspicions that he had about Corey.
Yeah, and to me it makes me wonder what the atmosphere was inside the home between
Corey and Eric.
You know, if he's suspecting that she's up to something and he's switching all this stuff
behind her back because he doesn't trust her, I wonder if he felt safe.
I wonder if he thought there was some risk to him because if that's the case,
I wonder why he wouldn't, like, move out or something to,
to try and, you know, make himself a little bit safer.
Yeah, I mean, when you talk about being safe in your marriage, you know, I said it earlier, right?
We cover a lot of cases where one spouse ultimately murders or, you know, hires someone to, to murder them.
But I don't think most people ever have that thought that their spouse is going to kill them or have them killed.
I just don't think it happens.
Even when, like, things are going badly, I still think that's a hard place to to get to in your mind.
In January of 2022, Corey tried to log on and change the beneficiary of Eric's work insurance policy to herself.
Eric and his business partner, Cody Wright, were named as each other's beneficiaries so they could continue the business in the event of some tragedy.
but Corey wanted that money, and she apparently knew something was going to happen to Eric.
That was the same month that Corey started trying to find opiates.
Corey tried to cover her tracks by deleting incriminating text messages,
but investigators still found a link to Carmen Lobber,
who had a recent history of drug-related arrests.
She had been charged with multiple counts of possession,
of a controlled substance with intent to distribute.
and possession of drug paraphernalia, those charges meant she fully cooperated with the investigation
into Corey. If she hadn't, she would have been buried in fines in jail time. For giving investigators
her side of the story, which was backed up by GPS and phone records, she received treatment and probation.
According to Carmen Lobber, who performed house cleaning duties for Corey's flip properties,
Corey started texting her and asking her to sell her some pills.
This timing lined up with a sudden illness Eric experienced on Valentine's Day.
Corey purchased a sandwich for Eric that day, but they didn't eat together.
After he started eating the sandwich, he became extremely sick.
According to the Salt Lake Tribune, he apparently suffered a rash and said he felt like he was going to die.
He got so sick that he actually used an EpiPen, along to one of his sons, and took some liquid Benadryl.
afterwards he slept it off alone even though he had texted Corey that he was thinking about going to the hospital
she texted him that she would be on her way soon but hours later she was still gone
investigators believe that this was the first attempt on eric's life at least the first one that
they could prove and man morif i think about it a lot but you think about being vulnerable you might
think about you know being in the hospital okay sometimes when you're in the hospital you're very
vulnerable. But I think what a lot of people may not think of immediately is the food that we eat
every day. You know, who's cooking that food for you and how easy would it be for them to do
something to it? It's kind of a scary thought when you think about it like that. Yeah, it definitely
is. You're trusting sometimes strangers or, you know, the person you're living with in this case that we're
talking about. So, you know, you have to wonder, is there ever any situation when you can't trust
that person that's making your food? But one thing that I was thinking about was the EpiPen.
You know, a lot of people have them, you know, for one medical reason or another, because they
have allergies, food allergies that they could, you know, be a risk to their lives. And
he was fortunate enough to have one. I feel bad for people that have to carry them around. And I feel bad for
people that have to carry them around or have kids that have to have them just in case.
That's got to be frightening to always have one of those and know you might have to use it at any time.
There was also a scary situation on a vacation in Greece in 2019.
Eric got violently ill.
After drinking a cocktail he ordered, Eric's family claims he thought this was Corey trying to poison him.
But Corey insists that there wasn't even time for her to tamper.
with the drink, which was brought to the table by a waiter and that it was a reaction with a
medication you're not supposed to drink with.
Eric also told family and friends that he thought Corey was trying to poison him on Valentine's Day.
Corey's friends and family claimed that it was a joke, like Corey was so bad at cooking that
her food was poison.
But Eric's family and friends disagree.
He had never been more serious about anything.
In fact, after the sandwich incident on Valentine's Day, Eric even ate from the same restaurant shortly after this, casting doubt on any notion that he thought what happened was the restaurant's fault, food poisoning, or some kind of food allergy, fentanyl and other opiates can cause something called pseudo allergic reactions that include hives, itching, and other allergy symptoms.
Yeah, one thing that jumps out to me here is this is two times, according to Eric's family, that he suspected his wife had poisoned him.
And that has me thinking, and I don't want to blame Eric in any way here, but if I got to the point in my marriage where I thought my wife was actually trying to poison me, not once but twice, I wouldn't be living in the same house.
And I certainly wouldn't be eating or drinking anything she gave me.
so that I have to wonder what he was thinking and what his reasons were for not leaving the home and in getting out of that situation.
Yeah, that's a good observation.
I think what it does, though, definitely is it gives us a little more insight, right, into what Eric was thinking in regards to, like, changing the beneficiary to his sister and all of that.
Because I think at a certain point, he thought Corey was trying to poison him.
And then also I would be concerned, too, about the children.
You know, if you're living with a partner that you think might be trying to poison you,
can you trust them around your children?
So I wonder if that crosses mine at all.
Soon after Valentine's Day, Corey started asking Carmen to find her something stronger.
According to 48 hours, she actually asked for, quote, some of the Michael Jackson stuff.
Carmen purchased pills for Corey on three different occasions before Eric's death.
She first asked for pain pills, claiming one of her investors had a lot of her.
back injury. Corey paid Carmen $900 for this round of pills, just three days before Valentine's
Day when Eric believes Corey tried to poison him with a sandwich. But then, two weeks later,
she claimed they weren't strong enough, and she asked Carmen for some of the Michael Jackson stuff.
She paid another $900. Six days after this purchase, Eric was dead. Some people don't see Carmen
is very credible because as Corey's then lawyer, Sky Lazaro pointed out to 48 hours,
Carmen was on probation at the time that she became the state star witness.
And some people will note that the drug that famously killed Michael Jackson was called Propofal,
as if Corey was trying to find a vial of propofal and not stronger pills.
Others note that because everyone knows what happened to Michael Jackson,
just the fact that Corey mentioned his name, is damning,
and proves there was only one outcome she was looking for.
Because Corey deleted all communication between herself and Carmen, she couldn't prove that
anything Carmen claimed was false. It was Corey's word versus Carmen's. Investigators obviously
felt that it was Carmen who was telling the truth. They used her information to secure an arrest
warrant. But it wasn't just Carmen's word that led investigators to their conclusion,
because as it turns out, Carmen wasn't the only one Corey tried to buy drugs from. A contractor
named William Hayden Jeff's was also supposedly asked to find Corey Fentanyl in January the
month before she contacted Carmen, but he refused. Sadly, he died before trial. His wife, who did testify,
couldn't say much due to rules about hearsay. As the investigation moved on, it became more and more
clear to investigators that greed and financial gain was the reason Corey wanted her husband dead.
We talked about some of the financial issues earlier, but investigators found that Corey had $7 million of debt.
Most of her home flips weren't profitable.
Corey was taking out loans that required daily repayment.
One of her close friends lost everything due to a deal with her.
She bought a house from Corey, paid her, moved in, and then was evicted for not paying.
The home did not belong to her.
Corey was under a huge amount of financial pressure,
and she felt that Eric was worth more to her dad than he was alive.
But the money troubles kept piling up, even after Eric died.
The day after her husband's tragic and very sudden death,
Corey closed on the purchase of a home in Heber City, Utah.
The 20,000 square foot mansion cost nearly $4 million.
She planned to, quote, fix up the massive property,
live in part of it, and use the rest as a gorgeous,
event venue with expansive views of the sprawling hills nearby. According to Corey's mother, Lisa
Darden, Corey was told by an accountant that she could make $12 million if she did flip the property
correctly. But fix-up would imply that the home had even been fully built. This wasn't just
slapping on a new coat of paint and updating some fixtures. The mansion was just the bare bones of
a structure. Inside, nothing was finished. The $4 million investment in the property was already a huge
amount of money, but the building costs would have been astounding.
There was also a huge amount of red tape involved, which is why it wasn't finished by the
original builders.
Going through was such a large purchase when she was already in debt and had just lost
her husband was just more proof to investigators that Corey had planned this and that she
believed she would be coming into a large amount of money.
At the time of Eric's death, she had no idea.
He had named his sister Katie as executor of his estate.
and moved all of his assets into the trust that Corey couldn't touch.
The day after closing on the home, just two days after Eric's death,
Corey called a locksmith to get into Eric's safe.
As the executor of Eric's will, his sister Katie obviously disagreed.
With this decision, Eric's family showed up to try to explain the situation to the locksmith.
This is the same day that Corey learned she was not the beneficiary listed on Eric's
will. According to 48 hours, this made Corey so angry that she punched Eric's sister Amy in the
face and neck. At the end of March, Corey sued Katie Richens Benson, attempting to become
executor of Eric's estate. Corey claimed that the terms of their prenuptial agreement meant she
had a right to his assets, their home, and his accounts. And more if I just keep thinking that
Corey just continues to look worse and worse.
As time goes on,
I mean,
investigators are suspicious of what she did prior to Eric's death.
And then you learn about some of the things that happen afterwards.
But I want to go back to $7 million of debt.
I mean,
that is such a massive amount.
But most people can't even fathom being $7 million in debt.
I know I can't.
Yeah, that takes a,
a lot of spending and, you know, probably poor decisions to get to that state.
And I don't know how you get yourself out of that, not easily, it seems like.
And maybe Corey was at the point where she didn't see any way out other than doing something
really terrible to get her hands on some money.
And I think, you know, what she's doing is sort of confirming suspicions by police,
you know, if she was really a grieving white.
upset by her husband's sudden tragic death, would she really close on this property the day
after he dies? Couldn't she postpone it? You know, just that to me just screams that she's all
about this money and property and not even putting that off. While Corey was figuring out how to get
her hands on any money that she could, police were dotting their eyes and crossing their T's to make
sure that they had a strong case against her. In May of 2003, just one month after she,
appeared on the TV, promoter book, Corey was arrested in charge of criminal homicide and aggravated
murder. In the state of Utah, aggravated murder carries a possible death penalty, though in this
case, the prosecution declined to ask for it. Corey was also charged with three counts of possessing
a controlled substance with intent to distribute. Bell was denied, so Corey would sit behind bars
as the case made its way through the courts. Corey entered a plea of not guilty to all the charges.
In late
2003, a letter was found in Corey Sell
that prosecutors believe was proof
she was trying to tamper with witnesses
according to 48 hours.
The letter is generally referred to
as the walk the dog letter
because at the top,
she wrote,
walk the dog with two exclamation points.
And then immediately after it,
it says,
but take vague notes.
So you remember.
In the letter,
Corey writes about how it's vital
to link Eric,
getting drugs and Mexico.
She then goes on to basically direct
what her brother should say on the stand.
In the letter, she tries to set up a scenario
where Eric was a longtime drug user
who used Corey to hide his addiction
and help smuggle drugs into the country.
And he also used her as a middleman
to get drugs from Carmen.
She writes that any information is usable
as long as it's upon information and belief,
hinting that those are the magic words to get in evidence that might end up being proven false.
In June 2025, additional charges were added against Corey, five counts of mortgage fraud and forgery,
seven counts of money laundering and writing a bad check,
and one count each of communications fraud and of having a pattern of unlawful activity.
Two months later, the charges were adjusted.
Prosecutors were only looking to take five charges to trial.
aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder, forgery, and two counts of insurance fraud.
The trial finally began in February 26.
And it's always interesting to me more of how, you know, charges are adjusted, right?
In the time leading up to the actual trial, my thought here is that, yeah, these are serious charges,
but not really compared to aggravated murder.
attempted aggravated murder.
And I feel as though prosecutors have to really lock in and figure out not only what are the most
important charges, but which ones they have the most evidence to support.
I mean, yeah, it's great to just tack on a bunch of charges, but it can also muddy the waters.
Yeah, and I wonder if part of that is taking some of those charges out if something went wrong
and she was found not guilty on this.
I wonder if they could come back with these other charges and bring her to trial for that
because that wouldn't really be double jeopardy if it's something else low together.
Although it sounds like the more serious charges are the ones they try to go within this trial.
But that's a good point too.
Maybe they're holding some stuff back in reserve,
just in the off chance that something goes wrong.
The courtroom would be the place that interesting,
Google searches Corey made were revealed.
Searches like if someone is poisoned,
what does it go down on the death certificate as?
And can cops uncover deleted messages on the iPhone?
Also, luxury prisons for the rich in America.
She was also looking up how you could completely wipe an iPhone.
If you didn't have physical access to it,
this search was made after her devices.
were seized. Now, a lot of these searches look pretty frantic. There were typos and periods instead of spaces.
It seemed that Corey was worried about two things. Money and freedom. She also looked up signs of being under federal investigation and how long do life insurance companies take to pay.
She also clicked on an article with the title, Cause of Death usually does not impact life insurance payment.
all the old Google searches. They always come back to bite people in the ass. But my thought is more for
my question is, how do people not think that this is going to happen? Because they're not listening
to criminology on a weekly basis. Well, that is true. Well, we don't want them. We don't want these
killers listening to us. But, you know, it's, I laughed at one point as I was listing some of that stuff.
but some of it is laughable.
The story is not as a whole because, you know, someone lost their life.
But when you're looking up something like luxury prisons for the rich in America,
to me that, that is just, it's worthy of a chuckle.
Because it seems like, you know, she thought there was a chance, right,
that she would be going to prison.
And she wanted to find the most luxurious one.
Yes, she wanted to go to a country club,
prisons as opposed to a one that was not up to her liking.
But you add that in with all the other searches and, man, it does not make her look good, not one bit.
Corey's version of the night Eric died goes like this.
At around 9 p.m., she and Eric were celebrating because she closed on the purchase of the Midway
Mansion.
Corey whipped up some Moscow mules and took them into the bedroom.
They drank them in bed, talking and winding down.
One of their sons woke up after having a nightmare, so Corey went into his room and tried to get him to settle down.
The two eventually fell asleep, and at around 3 a.m., Corey woke up and went back to her room to get into bed next to Eric.
But immediately, she knew something was wrong.
His body was stiff and cold, and she called 911.
The jury heard that Corey most likely didn't even try to do anything to save Eric's life.
When paramedics started to perform CPR, blood came out of his mouth.
signaling that Corey had not been doing the CPR that she claimed to have done.
If she had pressed on his chest, this would have happened sooner.
Investigators also described how she lied about where her phone was that night.
She claimed it was plugged in, charging on the nightstand until she got back into the room and called 911.
But this turned out to be completely false.
Not only was the phone being unlocked and locked, it registered multiple steps.
And before Corey called 911, she sent messages that she later deleted and made a phone call, maybe even a FaceTime call to an unknown person.
The phone logs registered that her speaker had been used before the 911 call.
It wasn't just shady financial details and drug-related secrets that came out at trial.
One bombshell piece of information that came to light was that Corey had been having an affair.
Robert Josh Grossman, who was dating Corey at the time of Eric's murder, testified for the prosecution.
Their intimate relationship went back to early 2020.
Text messages showed Corey talking about leaving Eric, marrying Grossman, and the two raising children on a large piece of property.
We now know that Corey was with Grossman on Valentine's Day, potentially while she was waiting for Eric to die from that poison sandwich.
The day after Valentine's Day, when investigators believe she failed an attempt to poison.
Eric. Corey asked Grossman whether or not he would marry her if she was a divorcee.
He confirmed that he would. But per that prenuptial agreement, which was signed the day of
their wedding, if she wanted to walk away from Eric, she would have to walk away with nothing.
According to 48 hours, the agreement stated that Corey would get nothing, none of Eric's
present or future income, property, or assets, unless he passed away, and only if they were
still legally married when it happened.
Man, more of the picture here of Corey is one of a real femme fatale.
I mean, there's a lot of devious stuff coming to light.
It seems as if the lifestyle grossman lived with Corey was lavish.
He stayed rent-free in the home she purchased the flip, helping her fix them up as a payment.
And Corey gave him the money to buy not one but two pickup trucks, along with regularly providing him funds for his own use.
Despite the spoils of his relationship with Corey, Grossman was obviously distraught over this whole situation.
He cried on the stand. He described Eric as a good person and a good father.
And he talked about the suspicions he had in hindsight.
Two weeks after Eric died, Corey asked Grossman, who's a veteran who served in Iraq,
if he had ever killed someone and how it made him feel.
Some people wonder if she was looking for an outlet for her own guilt.
Others suspect that maybe she was taking his temperature to see if he might offer to kill Eric.
Most doubt that she felt any guilt for her actions.
In court, prosecutors brought up what Corey did and didn't do on the day her husband died,
and her actions raised a lot of questions.
Maybe one of the most damning facts is that if Corey felt that this was some kind of overdose
or tainted gummy, why didn't she mention drugs to the first responders who could have saved
her husband's life. Why did she pretend to have no knowledge of any drug use or anything that could
have contributed to his death? Why was there zero proof of drugs in the home? Was protecting his
image more important than saving his life? Or was the drug story cooked up when they performed an autopsy
and learned that this was not a natural death? An investigator started looking harder at Corey.
Either way, Corey was guilty of something. At best, she withheld information that may have saved Eric.
At worse, once authorities found out what really happened, he ingested five times a normal amount of fentanyl that would kill a person.
Her only choice was to try to make people think he was the one responsible for his death.
In a move that shocked pretty much everyone, the defense rusted without calling any witnesses.
They had, until the very last moment, seemed to be ready to call witnesses,
and Corey even seemed ready to take the stand and tell her story.
After just three hours of deliberation, Corey was found guilty on all charges.
The sentencing date was set for May 13th, what would have been Eric's 44th birthday.
For the aggravated murder of Eric Richens, Corey Darden Richens was sentenced to life in prison
without the possibility of parole.
Additional sentences were handed down on the lesser charges, one to 15 years each,
on two counts of second-degree felony insurance fraud,
up to five years for third-degree felony forgery,
and five years to life for attempted, aggravated murder.
These will be served consecutively,
meaning that for Corey, this is a true life sentence.
Judge Richard Brasick told the courtroom,
a person convicted of those things
is simply too dangerous to ever be free.
and you know exactly what this judge said is what i think of most of the people that we talk about
and when you look at what they did how callous it was and specifically in this case with
cori how devious it was i i just don't think that these types of individuals should ever be out of
prison. I don't think they should ever walk the streets again. Yeah, she's clearly someone that can't be
around others. You know, she seems like there's nothing she won't try to do to get ahead financially,
you know, get what she thinks she's entitled to, you know, including murdering the father of her
children, you know, who else might she harm if she was free? Yeah, I feel like if you're capable of
of that, you're pretty much capable of anything.
Despite all the juicy details that came out, there was a lot of information that didn't even
make it to the trial. And what we learned from the sentencing documents was chilling.
First of all, despite having been found guilty of murdering their father, the life insurance
policies Corey held on all three of the Richens' children were still active, and they were still
in her name. Even from behind bars, she would benefit monetarily if something were to happen to any
of them. We also learned that the children were very aware that something was wrong the night their
father was killed. Quir's story was always that she had been sleeping in one of her son's beds after he
suffered a night terror, instead of going to sleep with Eric. This was her reasoning as to why she found
him far too late to help him. But two of the children tried to get into their parents' bedroom that
night, only to find that the door was locked. One of them even used a broom to knock a key off
of the door jam so that he could unlock the door and get into the room. But he accidentally
bumped the wall with the broom and it made a noise,
alerted him to his presence.
She yelled at him and told him to go back to bed.
The children were not sleeping peacefully during the murder.
They were scared and confused.
After Eric's death,
but before the children were taken from Corey
and placed with family,
their life seemed horrific.
It was not the healing,
comforting, compassionate life.
Corey described while promoting her book
in a victim impact statement to the court.
One of the boys wrote, Corey is always drunk.
He described Corey locking him in his room.
If he pointed out that she was intoxicated with a lock on the outside of the door and his brother having to sneak him food.
Another child wrote, you only cared about yourself and your stupid boyfriend.
They talked about how multiple pets died in Corey's care, including a kitten and rabbits.
They also lost everything they knew and couldn't understand.
understand why it was happening. You would think that while these victim impact statements by her
children being read in court would maybe be a moment for her to reflect and show remorse, she clearly
had no remorse. During the victim impact statements, she made faces, shook her head, and laughed
with her attorney. When she spoke at the hearing, she chose to use the time to read a letter she
wrote to her children, who by the way want nothing to do with her, and it made that very clear.
The letter was all about how people aren't perfect and we all make mistakes.
Corey was apparently planning to write follow-up books,
which had some people worry that she was planning to harm one of the boys.
The proposed title of her next book was,
Mom, How Far Away is Heaven?
You can interpret this as being about a child wondering how far away their loved ones are,
but if you put a sinister spin on it,
it's like a child asking how far they're going.
And man, you really have to feel bad for these kids.
not only did they they lose their father, but they find out just how evil their mother was.
I mean, that has got to be a set of circumstances that, you know, no child should ever have to deal with.
And they still seem relatively young, but it also seems like they understand and have made their decision that they don't want anything to do with her.
and that's pretty telling at that age for someone to know that their mother is a bad person that they don't want to be around.
That's pretty telling.
Killing her husband Eric was bad enough, but a lot of people think she wouldn't have stopped with him.
There are those who think Eric's family members were going to be targeted next.
The same day that Corey learned she wasn't the beneficiary to anything, she wrote another check to Carmen, $1,300.
this time for more pills.
Was she angry enough to try to kill Eric's sisters,
Katie or Amy, next?
Eric's family was more concerned
about the safety of Eric's children
and that they seemed to believe
that Corey was not only capable of harming them,
but actually did try to poison her own child.
And knowing that she would still financially benefit
from their deaths,
makes it seem like a real possibility.
Eric stayed in the marriage,
despite contacting a divorce attorney because he was afraid that he wouldn't receive full custody of the children.
And if he wasn't there to watch over them at every turn, they could be in danger.
This would leave them vulnerable.
And after being left by her husband, Corey certainly would have had a grudge, which may have made whatever intention she had for her children even worse.
He just couldn't risk it.
And more, if you kind of ask the question or,
earlier. Why did Eric stay in the relationship, even though, you know, he had all of these
suspicions and they even growed over time? And I think we're finding out now the reason why.
He was so worried about his kids that he just felt he couldn't risk the chance of not getting
custody and leaving them alone with Corey. Yeah. To put your children ahead of yourself,
is pretty admirable because even though he truly thought he was in danger, he just thought it
would be worse for him not to be there and the kids to be alone with her. So it's pretty commendable
that he risked his life and ultimately paid with his life to try and protect them. The question of
how exactly Eric ingested the drugs has still never been answered. Other than that it was only
found in his stomach, he had to have swallowed it. If he was so suspicious of Corey, would he have
accepted a drink from her, Corey's family believes he received a marijuana gummy that was
laced with fentanyl. No marijuana was found in his system or in his gastro contents,
meaning that even if Eric did use the gummies, it had been a while and it definitely isn't
what killed him. At autopsy, Eric tested positive for COVID-19. Corey confirmed that the
whole family had recently been sick, but it wasn't the cause of his death. So a lot of questions,
you know, were answered in this case, but this is.
is one that still remains a mystery. I mean, it's pretty clear to me that Corey was involved in
his death, right? She was convicted, sentenced, but just how exactly it happened,
obviously she hasn't said, because that wouldn't be good for her to tell the truth. And people
are just left to speculate. Yeah, I think that's what's frustrating in some of these cases.
Well, sometimes you can find out the who, you don't always know how.
how they did it.
And unless they're willing to answer questions,
there's are questions that continue to linger for his family,
I'm sure.
And I think we do have a lot of answers on the why, right?
The financial.
I still go back to the $7 million in debt.
That is mind blowing.
And then, you know,
she's having an affair with this guy asking him if he'll marry her,
if she's no longer married.
All of that seems pretty cut and dry as to why she thought she needed to kill Eric, but the how.
How did it happen?
You would love to know every little detail of that, but sometimes you just don't get it.
There is still a civil case pending related to the trust and estate as well as a trial for the mortgage fraud and other charges.
Quarry maintains their innocence and plans to appeal.
file a motion for a new trial. In her statement to her boys at sentencing, Corey said,
One day when this is all over, we can sit down and talk about it. Corey continues to write letters
to her children, even though the letters are all returned on open. Now, three children have lost
both parents. Luckily, Eric's family is trying to raise them the way he would have if he could.
They are well cared for, but they can't get their father back.
This will always impact them.
In the end, Corey ended her husband's life and essentially hers and forever altered those of her children, all over money and greed.
And as we wrap this case up more, I mean, I think there are a lot of things about the cases that we cover that, you know, people really find hard to imagine.
Killing your spouse.
I mean, that is so hard to imagine for most people.
But then when you look at the reason behind it, to me, it seems even harder to imagine.
I mean, this wasn't a case where, you know, she was in danger.
She was in fear for her life.
Even though people don't condone those, maybe they understand the reasoning behind it a little bit.
but with something like this, there's no way to understand it.
It's just about greed.
You want money.
You want to be with someone else.
And you're willing to kill your spouse to get it.
Yeah, this really seems like a case where there was never any doubt as to the motive.
And the more and more police looked, the more troubling things they found, the more proof they found that Corey had planned this.
and it wasn't a short-term goal of her.
She had been working on this for some time.
And I think it just shows the extent that she went through
and how long she had been thinking about doing this.
And I think one of the scariest things to me is the thought that, you know,
after she killed Eric and found out that if she wasn't a beneficiary of everything she thought
she was, there's some real evidence that she possibly could have killed her children or members
of Eric's family. That's a scary thought as well. But that's it for our episode on Eric Richens.
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So that's it for another episode of Criminology.
But Morph and I will be back with all of you next Saturday night with a brand new episode.
So until then for Mike.
And Morph.
We'll talk to you next week.
Take care, everyone.
