Jurors heard a stark portrait of ambition, debt, and desperation as prosecutors laid out their final argument against Kouri Richins, the Utah mother accused of killing her husband and later publishing a children’s book about grief.
According to the New York Post, during closing arguments Monday, prosecutors claimed Richins’ carefully crafted image masked a financial and personal crisis that ultimately turned deadly.
Richins, 35, was described as “intensely ambitious” yet deeply dissatisfied in her marriage to Eric Richins, with whom she shared three sons.
According to prosecutor Brad Bloodworth, her home-flipping business had spiraled into roughly $4.5 million in debt. At the same time, he argued, she stood to gain access to her husband’s $4 million estate.
“She wanted to leave Eric Richins but did not want to leave his money,” Bloodworth said. “Their prenup meant if she left him she would also leave most of his money.”
Prosecutors allege Richins poisoned her husband by slipping fentanyl into his Moscow Mule on March 4, 2022.
Roughly a year later, she released a children’s book titled “Are You With Me?” which she promoted publicly as a way to help her children cope with their father’s death.
In court, Bloodworth argued that the book was part of a broader effort to maintain appearances.
He told jurors Richins had long been driven by status, pointing to what he described as insecurities tied to her upbringing and past work cleaning homes for wealthy families.
“She carefully curated the facade of a privileged, affluent, successful business owner,” he said.
But behind that image, prosecutors painted a different picture.
“Behind the facade, Kouri Richins was incompetent,” Bloodworth alleged. “She took tremendous risks. She borrowed money by any means necessary at exorbitant rates. She gambled other people’s money and lost. Her business was imploding.”
“She was a risk taker,” he continued. “There was a way forward. Eric had to die.”
Richins has pleaded not guilty to aggravated murder and related charges after a three-week trial.
If convicted, she faces up to 25 years in prison.














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