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Kouri Richins Still Believes She'll Be Acquitted — The Psychology of Total Denial

Kouri Richins Still Believes She'll Be Acquitted — The Psychology of Total Denial

The Case Against Kouri Richins · Hidden Killers Podcast

March 5, 202625m 37s

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Show Notes

After nearly three years in jail awaiting trial, Kouri Richins has maintained her innocence. According to her mother, she believes "a hundred percent" she'll be found not guilty. Her defense team previously withdrew citing an "irreconcilable situation."

When someone has sustained their alternative narrative this long, through this much contrary evidence, what are we looking at psychologically? Is this strategic denial, or has the distortion become so complete that the objective facts simply don't penetrate?

Psychotherapist Shavaun Scott examines cognitive distortion at its most entrenched — the construction and maintenance of an alternate reality in the face of overwhelming contradictory evidence.

The pattern is consistent: Kouri wrote a grief book after Eric's death and promoted it on television. From jail, she filed lawsuits demanding millions from his estate. When she learned she'd been cut from the will two days after his death, testimony says she punched his sister. The "Walk the Dog" letter — which prosecutors called blatant witness tampering — suggests ongoing attempts to control how others perceive events.

Internet searches recovered from her phone included "luxury prisons for the rich" and questions about how poisoning appears on death certificates. These suggest awareness of criminality and consequences.

Yet the internal narrative appears unshaken.

The defense has raised Eric's alleged feelings for a coworker as context for marital problems. But Shavaun Scott examines how people with distorted entitlement use a partner's imperfections — real or perceived — to justify actions orders of magnitude more harmful. The psychological math that makes "he wasn't perfect" equal "therefore I can do anything."

This is what happens when distortion becomes identity — when the false story someone tells themselves becomes too central to who they are to ever let go.

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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

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