2026年2月23日 / 美国东部时间下午2:04 / 哥伦比亚广播公司/美联社
周一,在犹他州一起谋杀案审判的第一天,检察官将一名犹他州母亲和儿童读物作家描绘成一个贪财的杀手,指控她毒杀了丈夫,而她的辩护团队则敦促陪审员在听取她的陈述前不要妄下判断。
35岁的库丽·里奇斯(Kouri Richins)面临多项重罪指控,罪名是她于2022年3月在靠近滑雪小镇帕克城的家中,用芬太尼毒杀了丈夫埃里克·里奇斯(Eric Richins)。她强烈否认了这些指控。
检察官称,她将五倍于致死剂量的合成阿片类药物混入他饮用的莫斯科骡子鸡尾酒中。法庭文件显示,她还被指控在一个月前的情人节,用掺有芬太尼的三明治试图毒害他,导致他出现荨麻疹和昏厥。
埃里克·里奇斯去世后,库丽·里奇斯自费出版了一本关于丧亲之痛的儿童读物,旨在帮助她的年幼儿子和其他孩子应对失去父母的痛苦。
案件辩论于周一开始,里奇斯坐在辩护团队旁边,在法律便签本上做笔记,身穿黑色西装外套和白色衬衫。
库丽·里奇斯在犹他州帕克城最高法院参加谋杀案审判
2026年2月23日,周一,她在丈夫死亡案的审判中,看起来情绪激动。斯宾塞·希普斯 / 美联社
萨米特县检察官布拉德·布拉德沃斯(Brad Bloodworth)告诉陪审员,里奇斯欠下450万美元债务,却错误地认为如果丈夫去世,她将继承其价值超过400万美元的遗产。检察官称,她正计划与另一名男友开始新生活。
“证据将证明,库丽·里奇斯为了钱财杀害了埃里克,并试图获得人生的新开始,”布拉德沃斯说,“最重要的是,她想要他的钱来维持自己特权、富裕和成功的假象。”
近200万美元的人寿保险单
辩护律师凯瑟琳·内斯特(Kathryn Nester)在开庭陈述中播放了里奇斯丈夫死亡当晚拨打911报警电话的录音。录音中,里奇斯歇斯底里地哭泣,几乎无法回答调度员的问题。
“那是一位妻子成为寡妇的声音,”内斯特说。
据哥伦比亚广播公司附属电视台KUTV报道,录音中可以听到里奇斯哭着说她不知道发生了什么,也不知道如何进行心肺复苏,但愿意尝试。
内斯特说,埃里克·里奇斯患有莱姆病,并且对止痛药成瘾,她暗示他可能是药物过量。
律师称,这对夫妇经历了艰难的一年,两人都曾考虑离婚,但他们参加了婚姻咨询并决定继续在一起。她说,他们很幸福,并且在丈夫死亡当晚正庆祝一笔房产交易的成功。
审判预计将持续到3月26日。几十名希望旁听的人从凌晨4点开始就在法院外支起草坪椅露营,距离审判开始还有四个半小时。
可能被传唤作证的证人包括一名家政服务员,她声称曾三次向里奇斯出售芬太尼,以及据称与里奇斯有染的男子。
里奇斯面临近30项指控,包括加重谋杀、谋杀未遂、伪造、抵押贷款欺诈和保险欺诈。仅谋杀罪一项就可能判处25年至终身监禁。
在2023年5月被捕前的几个月里,里奇斯自费出版了一本插图儿童读物《你在我身边吗?》,讲述一位长着天使翅膀的父亲在去世后仍守护着年幼儿子的故事。这本书可能成为检察官将埃里克·里奇斯的死亡定性为有预谋的谋杀并试图掩盖真相的关键证据。布拉德沃斯周一向陪审员介绍了里奇斯如何在当地电视台和电台宣传这本书。
检察官称,在丈夫去世数年前,里奇斯未经埃里克知情,就为他购买了多份人寿保险,总保额近200万美元。法庭文件还显示,她的银行账户余额为负,欠债权人超过180万美元,并被债权人起诉。
布拉德沃斯向陪审团展示了库丽·里奇斯与男友罗伯特·乔希·格罗斯曼(Robert Josh Grossman)之间的一系列短信。她在短信中向格罗斯曼描述了自己离开丈夫、在离婚中获得数百万美元并最终与格罗斯曼结婚的梦想。
布拉德沃斯还展示了里奇斯的网络搜索历史截图,其中包括“犹他州女子监狱”、“美国富人监狱”以及“警察能否强迫你做测谎测试?”等内容。
空药瓶和大麻软糖
州方关键证人、家政服务员卡门·劳伯(Carmen Lauber)告诉警方,她曾三次向里奇斯出售芬太尼。但她未被指控与此案有关,警方称她已获得豁免权。
辩护律师周一辩称,劳伯实际上并未向里奇斯出售芬太尼,而是为了获得法律保护而说谎。法庭上未发现任何芬太尼在里奇斯家中,而该名家政服务员的毒品供应商称,2023年向警方陈述时他正在监狱戒毒,后来他在宣誓书中断言只向劳伯出售了阿片类药物羟考酮。
内斯特向陪审员展示了埃里克死亡当晚放在他床头柜上的空药瓶照片,以及他常吃的大麻软糖袋。她说埃里克依赖止痛药,并曾要求妻子为他获取阿片类药物。
里奇斯的母亲丽莎·达登(Lisa Darden)告诉《48小时》节目,她“百分之百确定”女儿会被证明无罪。
“任何了解库丽的人都知道……她不可能做这种事。……她永远不会做这种事,”达登说。
备受关注的案件
里奇斯的律师试图将审判移出其所在社区,辩称在大多数潜在陪审员都了解此案的情况下,她无法获得公正审判,但法官驳回了变更审判地点的请求。哥伦比亚广播公司法律顾问卡罗琳·波利斯(Caroline Polisi)表示,她对这一决定并不感到意外,并指出虽然“这是一个备受关注的案件”,但检察官仍应能够组建一个公正的陪审团。
KUTV报道称,潜在陪审员被要求填写一份23页、包含99个问题的调查问卷,其中包括询问他们从哪里获取新闻、观看什么电视节目以及支持哪些组织。前检察官内森·埃弗谢德(Nathan Evershed)表示,该问卷“是我见过的最长的”。
“当他们开始询问对案件的看法、开始询问与受害者权利组织的背景联系、社交媒体账号等内容时,你可以看到他们真的在试图深入挖掘,”埃弗谢德告诉KUTV,“告诉我们你听什么,告诉我们你的社交媒体,告诉我们对非常具体的事情的非常具体的看法。”
Kouri Richins, Utah mom who wrote book about grief, fatally poisoned husband to get his money, prosecutors say
February 23, 2026 / 2:04 PM EST / CBS/AP
Prosecutors portrayed a Utah mother and children’s book author as a money-hungry killer Monday on the first day of a murder trial in her husband’s death, while her defense team urged jurors not to make judgments before hearing her side.
Kouri Richins, 35, faces a slew of felony charges for allegedly killing her husband, Eric Richins, with fentanyl in March 2022 at their home just outside the ski town of Park City. She has vehemently denied the allegations.
Prosecutors say she slipped five times the lethal dose of the synthetic opioid into a Moscow mule cocktail that he drank. She is also accused of trying to poison him a month earlier on Valentine’s Day with a fentanyl-laced sandwich that made him break out in hives and black out, according to court documents.
After Eric Richins death, Kouri Richins self-published a children’s book about grief to help her young sons and other kids cope with the loss of a parent.
As arguments in the case got underway on Monday, Richins sat next to her defense team, taking notes on a legal pad and wearing a black blazer and white blouse.
Kouri Richins, a Utah mother accused of fatally poisoning her husband, looks on during her murder trial at the Summit County Courthouse in Park City, Utah, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026. Spenser Heaps / AP
Summit County prosecutor Brad Bloodworth told jurors that Richins was $4.5 million in debt and falsely believed that if her husband died, she would inherit his estate worth more than $4 million. Prosecutors have argued she was planning a future with another man she was seeing on the side.
“The evidence will prove that Kouri Richins murdered Eric for his money and to get a fresh start at life,” Bloodworth said. “More than anything, she wanted his money to perpetuate her facade of privilege, affluence and success.”
Almost $2 million in life insurance policies
Defense attorney Kathryn Nester started her opening statement by playing the recording of Richins’ 911 call from the night of her husband’s death. Richins was sobbing hysterically on the call and seemed barely able to answer the dispatcher’s questions.
“Those were the sounds of a wife becoming a widow,” Nester said.
Richins was heard crying and saying she didn’t know what happened and did not know how to do CPR, but was willing to try, CBS affiliate KUTV reported.
Eric Richins had Lyme disease and was addicted to painkillers, Nester said. She suggested he may have overdosed.
The couple had gone through a tough year, the attorney said, and both had contemplated divorce, but they went to marriage counseling and decided to stay together. She said they were happy and celebrating closing on a property deal the night of his death.
The trial is slated to run through March 26. A few dozen people hoping to watch camped outside the courthouse in lawn chairs starting at 4 a.m., four and a half hours before the trial began.
Among the witnesses who will likely be called to testify are a housekeeper who claims to have sold fentanyl to Richins on three occasions and the man with whom Richins was allegedly having an affair.
Richins faces nearly three dozen counts, including aggravated murder, attempted murder, forgery, mortgage fraud and insurance fraud. The murder charge alone carries a sentence of 25 years to life in prison.
In the months before her arrest in May 2023, Richins self-published the illustrated children’s book “Are You with Me?” about a father with angel wings watching over his young son after passing away. The book could play a key role for prosecutors in framing Eric Richins’ death as a calculated killing with an elaborate cover-up attempt. Bloodworth told jurors Monday about how Richins promoted it on local TV and radio stations.
Years before her husband’s death, Richins opened numerous life insurance policies on Eric Richins without his knowledge, with benefits totaling nearly $2 million, prosecutors alleged. Court documents also indicate she had a negative bank account balance, owed lenders more than $1.8 million and was being sued by a creditor.
Bloodworth showed the jury a series of text messages between Kouri Richins and Robert Josh Grossman, the man with whom she was having an affair. She texted Grossman about her dream of leaving her husband, gaining millions in the divorce and one day marrying Grossman.
Bloodworth also showed screenshots of Richins’ internet search history, which included “women Utah prison,” “luxury prisons for the rich America,” and “Can cops force you to do a lie detector test?”
Empty pill bottles and marijuana gummies
The state’s key witness, housekeeper Carmen Lauber, had told detectives she sold Richins up to 90 blue-green fentanyl pills that she acquired from a dealer. Lauber is not charged in connection with the case, and detectives have said she was granted immunity.
Defense attorneys argued Monday that Lauber did not actually give Richins fentanyl and was motivated to lie for legal protection. None was ever found in Richins’ house, and the housekeeper’s dealer has said he was in jail and detoxing from drug use when he told detectives in 2023 that he sold fentanyl to Lauber. He later said in a sworn affidavit that he sold her only the opioid OxyContin.
Nester showed jurors photos of an empty pill bottle sitting on Eric’s nightstand the night of his death and bags of marijuana gummies he was known to use regularly. She said he was dependent on painkillers and had asked his wife to procure opioids for him.
Richins’ mother, Lisa Darden, told “48 Hours” that she is “a hundred percent” certain her daughter will be found innocent.
“For anybody who knows Kouri just knows … She could not have done this. … She’d never do this,” Darden said.
High-profile case
Richins’ attorneys tried to get the trial moved out of her community, arguing that she could not get a fair trial where the vast majority of potential jurors knew about the case, but the judge denied a change of venue. CBS News legal contributor Caroline Polisi said she wasn’t surprised by the decision and said that while “this is a sensationalized case” with “national attention,” prosecutors should be able to assemble an impartial jury.
KUTV reported that potential jurors were asked to respond to a 23-page questionnaire containing 99 questions, including inquiries about where they get their news, what TV they watch, and what organizations they support. Nathan Evershed, a former prosecutor who is not affiliated with the case, said the document is “about as long as I’ve ever seen.”
“When they started getting into opinions about the case, when they started getting into backgrounds of connections with victim rights organizations, social media accounts, these things, you can see they’re really trying to get granular on this,” Evershed told KUTV. “Tell us about what you listen to. Tell us about social media. Tell us about very specific opinions on very specific things.”
发表回复